The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 18, 1930, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, FEB. 18, 1930 Rule America’s ENTIRE CHANGE CHANGE ‘ TONIGHT TONIGHT It Hits Spots “CLEOPATR: 4 Great Event in Technicolo: ENTIRE WHERE SOUND SOUNDS BEST Coliseum Jectric | SYSTEM SNOW BLIZZARD and STORM this—— 9 SHOWS 7:30 and 9:30 Sure Westers Tonight i 7 Wednesdav Subwa )'s——-;}lfirm cleck flais—New Ycrk life as millie A 100 PER CENT ALL TALKING SHOW [ These recently elected Citv Fathers of ¢ George W. Snyder, and President James Reading, Pa., face the camera smilingly | H. Maurer. Maurer was Socialist Candi- just after taking office. They enjoy the | date for Vice-President of the United ‘ distinetion of being the only 100 per cent | States in the last election and has announced that he will be the Socialist Candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania in the coming | election for that offica. Vilma fgdh@ THIS. IS HEAVEN Mn(_James Hall 4 1 ALFRED: SANTE Besides the talking sequences in which Vilma Banky, James Hall b | fore prohibition. and the other preminent members of the { heard, there gor W 3 | In referring to drinking at dances a colorful sound and musical synchroniz n. The s 2 3 is made to say “never tures include: the hum and buzz of populated New Y h condition before we streets; the being chaine the benign influence slip; a Hungarian love song p! talented Hu stead Act.” Some of us violinist; Ellis Jsland cn a busy day y and street nc b d;:):zf‘;f:!;:"wm] and a society ca tors enticing men to has seen Socialist Municipal Government in Amer- | jca. Left to right: William C. Hoverter, Jesse George, Mayor J. Henry Stump, (Intoruational Newsreel) i of the menace | to publ in former d: I'It is the judgment of the writer | that a race the natives of Al- | aska are more temperate than be- r— Do You Like It, Girls are din and noises of a ferry beat subw Lavish g beach robe LSy . - = vhich adorans 10— 50—Loges 75 cents Miss e G oy Feey —— Ruth Raleigh, i B s Ereots in the Basly inosrie 0N WATCH FOR THE BIG SPECIAL ; : ] of New Yor, was before prohibition “ALIBI” setween swims cffect. In Alaska, as THE SIX BEST PICTURES at the there are two kinds of fashionable otherwise. PRODUCED 1IN 1429 nakings and fe o= W R ) 1 mur- oman pool, the United is the Stat £ s so there have been viclators atest thing in of th A prohibitory law. Such law Miami Beach, . { ors will be fou at the ot T : patronized by their sym- | world thrille The robe 15 a e i athizer Waat Dances characts :N:Jrh:f”f;?‘:;u ) LLaRSpRsoHL ) more in evidence in”Alaska TP S metallic affair, & t clicwhiere in the United | iy Il"' dmh-‘of e ) ; 3 "We challenge the Bishop's asser-| gives a gold and silver, nge and is quite - le it, that prohibi-| sound pfh, : wreaked harm on Alaska. | most the vogue among the riliar with the condi- | Winter assage of the pro- | e T B Alaska’ will affirm ALL DIALOGUE FEATURE "35‘?:"‘0"15‘3- : AT COLISEUM TONIGHT i Newsceel) 3 dere ONE OF THE SALESMAN 100 Per Cent Talking Comedy Attractions At Theatres with " OWEN MOORE CAROL LOMBARD DIANE ELLIS Pathe ®Picture FOX MOVIETONEWS PARAMOUNT' SOUND NEWS form 5 an X d we believ mains t} will of the Judge Wick ham h: ntly ré-| tated the fact that the bone (11‘_\" a law, of which he wes the!l ent author, was in response 10 | CODE & ORTH Vitaphone Act Framed in a ba C snow-bound in tense drama in its riche: be presented at the Col ater tonight, when “High Voltage” * William Boyd's fir: all-dialogue * production, will start ils run. Advance reports on the picture indicate that it is_ one of Boy best, and reviewers who have s»en “High Voltage” d: voice adds immense tiveness of his p “High Voltage” the X human beings who fa in a deserted meeting house rooned from th> outside w snow, and who find the real va tlons of life and the beauty of ro- mance in their very fight for ex- majo: (y.: Sierras ently as Superintendent he has vis- | cc as some men have pon the use of term excepting o insist To app of nell B. P Harrison De James Brad to » Arctic a 2 t an efore segtior the 1 ysurdity New Star [ as to apply the U ed States. that the people of now in the incbriate nder which we do not ishop intended or ut-| DUDEPE—— :|And to cf ISSUE WITH BISHOP P. T.'ception may well be taken is : tho » ROWE CGN PROHIBITION ! eople of the North have drank aleohol” That is no » > of Alaska than of a tion of the United State story of e < deal [in the season, and more moderate |cludes the leasing of the entire weather can be expected. Plans | building at present, he said. Under for it have been submitted to com- | present arrangements the Amuse< pany headquarters in San Fran- ment Company will operate a con- cisco. | cession in ti:e upper floor of tiu the insistent demand of the ma- jority of the citizefis of Alaska. In the opinion of the writer it still re- mains the attitude of the large majority. And we believe farther | in, in speaking of the natives, op is made to say thin SITKA, Fcb. 12.—To the Edit ter prehibition came to In a recent issue of the Al nk a istence. The story is among the strong- lent with Owen Moore, of the stage and screen, in the next important role. ~ Carol Lom- bard, who will be seen in the fu- ture Pathe dialogue productions, plays opposite Boyd, while Diane who made a profound im- ion as his leading lady in “The Leatherneck,” has another impertant role. Billy Bevan, of comedy fame, adds to the lighter moments of the picture, and Phil- lips Smalley, noted screen veteran, completes the cast. | Howard Higgin directed “High Voltage,” which is an original story by Elliott on with dialogue by James himself a star " VILMA BAN TALKIE, AT PALACE B— As good a reporter as he is a technician, Alfred Santell has come to fame in Hollywood as the right man to wield the dir@tor’s mega- phone in pictures where atmospherc must be meticulously accurate and significant. The latest example of his pceuliar skill in making mov- jes authentic without dullness, to the Palace Theatre to- comes Dally Empire is an article from the he San 1930, R under the ca; “Bishop be: M 16 is so filled with stent statements as to make one pe doubt its authenticity. with the reservation, “if this was what the Bishop meant and said.”| yrite year in which and a farther good fortune to be associated ever since the missionary work of the byterian Church night in “This Is Heaven,” Vilma , productizn Banky's latest starring which she for Samuel Goldwyn, in i5 seen for the first tim2 3 Island, then as a flipping hot cakes in a metropolitan white-tiled restaurant, | then as the flancee a handsome millionaire in disguise, Miss Bank}: acts a role which gave Santell every cpportunity for using atmos- pheric detail effectively. His ex- pert eye, which had caught all the thousand and one things which g0 to make up the life of the cvery- day New Yorker, the dingy apari- ments, the subway crowds, the ha- bits and mannerisms of waltre: es, stood him in good stead. g BIG SPECIAL “ALIBI” J IS COMING TO PALACE con- | maintain a'of the pecple of Alaska dr: some did Seattle Post-Intelligencer accredited proportion maintained was not dif- as a Universal Gervice dispatch from ferent from that in other sections, ncisco of date January 13, The members of our churches have )l and en for ve condemns prohibition in Al- from the use of aleohol and their standard of In the judgment of the mora At the out- writer the majority of the pecple emphat set one should qualify a criticism'of Alaska have not and do fiot use alcohol. The second statement which at- that the It was the good fortune of the tracts attention is “Prohibition has tinually to arrive in Alaska in the changed the people from a drinking use the Bishop race, rance.” ce, into an Pres- counts: First, as stated, there never fr charge of local has been a “drinking race” in Al- fered in particular, the illegal tra weaned to the virtue of tem- relieved inebriate cla ns ith We question this asser not and the en way them unk till | h into; n on two pensed y had fallen into drunk- | : : 4 s.” It 1s a slander of the| 4 p 2 | ative people of Alaska -to charge s i 7 | being today a race 7 the most part abstainers|the Bishop so it. in Prohibition h as well of and we do not believe| intended of Alaska will substantiate “tem- the improvement of the natives in y and in no direction more ally so than manufacture of intoxicants. 5 in the evil day of the saloon native was belng con-| solicited to purchase and cants, | im as well as other citi- from the temptation of legal intoxicants n the abuse from which he suf-| The f- the use It | Assoclated Press Photo Last season Doris Carson was understudy for Ruby Keeler Jolson. 7| Now she’s hoofing in her own right as| and singing George Gershwin's tunes as an enlivener of the musi- | | cal satire, “Strike Up the Band.” i support prohibition today because of its evident beneficial effects, economic and moral. JAMES H. CONDIT. —— e STANDARD TANKER IS DUE TODAY WITH OIL The big Standard OIll tanker Richmond was scheduled to arrive in port today to discharge 6,500 bar- rels of diesel oil for the local sta- tion of that company., It will dis- charge from ine Union Oil dock. A six-inch pipe line has been installed between the Standard’s |tanks and the Union Oll dock. Oil will be pumped from this to the tanks. A second six-inch line will be laid from the same dock for gasoline the near future. It will be com- pleted by the first week in March |that the majority of our citizens | . | UPPER | with service, work to start in| line tanker is due to | arrive here with supplies local station. for the being held in obeyance 'until later Men’s Hart Schaffner Men’s Hart Schaffner Men’s Hart Schaffner AR T Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Overcoats, reg. Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Overcoats, reg. $45.00 values ... k on the new local station is | T L L T LT T T L T L e e T Final Clearance Prices and Marx Suits, and Marx Suits, reg. $35.00 values and Marx Suits, The Juneau | pany ,whose program was partially cutlined in The Empire of Satur- ‘dny, February 15, has arranged to lease only the upper floor of the A. B. Hall, according to a state- ment made by John Reéck today. Mr. Reck has charge of the build- ing and a previous errangement hall and the “Arena” of the Ame: can Legion will be maintained or HALL FOR ROLLER RINK | the first floor. s | e e | John Newmarker and Capt. G. W. Morgan, of the U, 8. Steamboat Inspection Service, returned to Ju- |neau on the Alaska after a week': absence in Kelchikan on an spection tour. - o E. E. Engstrom, o Fish Brokerage, retuin: Wrangell on the Alaska. Amusement Com- the American Legion pre- DON'T MISS THIS! Old Indian Custom and Costume Dance ELKS’ HALL FEBRUARY 20TH——38:00 P. M. $25.00 17.50 32.50 25.00 22.50 $50.00 values reg. reg. $65.00 values 50.00 values ... A few Men’s Mackinaws, reg. $10.00 values Men’s Soft Collars, Van Heusen, 25 cents each, 5 for Men’s Goeodrich Kingfisher Boots, hip, pair Boys’ Long Cord or Wool Pant pair All Piece COO(]S—Sflk-WOUlVCu;'lui;IS Scrims, - Draperics, Velvets and Velours at HALF PRICE. Ginghams, in plain colors, 45¢ to 60c values, 5 yards a2 __~ AN ITALIAN CARTOONIST PARODIES OUR AMERICAN COMIC Marking the most forward step 7t ¢ France (Maggie) tells Premier Briand (Jiggs) of her many troubles and vex yet made in the new art of talk-; L ope (a flimsy house of cards). Uncle Sam, John Bull. and the Italian Fascist. b's boon companions. watch the new stun® with great ing and sound pictures, “Alib”| 4 wsement—the first two of these gentry very effectively spoiling the act. Coming hore Uasweeessis, Our Leto weets with Jiggs casal sad fare. United Artists all dialogue under- | . Froma Il Trdvzso (Kopwe) Lo ROER STRIP CELEBRITIES. JIGGS AND MAGGIE He sallies forth confidently to arrange a United States

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