The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 25, 1930, Page 3

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| LACK OF FEED “Alibi’ ONE OF THE 6 BEST PICTURES OF 1929 All Talking and g Singi LAUREL AND HARDY The two funniest men on the screen in their First ALL-TALKIE COMEDY “UNACCUSTOMED AS WE ARE” 10—25—75 cents—Loges $1.00 the [the wa one strange derelicts that can a Attractions At Theatres | with a fish! | sees them ¢ |ever sees them so m out the line to bait the hook. " sit . appar nothi “THE SOPHOMORE" IS The boy who broke into the movies by making Cecil M. DeMille Jaugh during the making of “Th2 Godless Girl,” comes into his own in “The Sophomore,” a Pathe dia- logue picture, which comes to the C m tonight. He is Eddie Quillan, youthful Pathe comedian, whose meteori vise from the comparative obscur- ity of a vaudeville performer to that of a screen star, has been ac- complished in less than two years In this produetion Eddie is given his biggest chance, playing a wise- cracking college boy with an over- grown sense of humor, which con- stantly gets him into trouble He loses his tuition fee shooting craps and someone unknown 1o him pays his fee to ¥ & faculiy. This 1 s in some amusing and highly matic developments. Sally O'Neil, star of countless successful screen features, plays the feminine lead opposite Eddie with Jeatistte Loff in another im- portant part. Others in the cast include Stanley Smith, Marilyn Morgan, Lew Ayres and Russell Gleason. The joy of commencement week —the tragedy of examinations—the pain of fraternity initiations—the Jaughter of a class play—the ro- mance of young love—the thrill of a great football game—all these and more are embraced in the story of -this appealing and riotous dia- B £ logue picture. Manufacturers say the ranchers must ap ate the comforts and 3 adictpi o indings to which their WA L0/ xs guests have been accustomed. { SHOWING, PALACE bl /7 Ll P i e®eovcoeoo00 000 PREACHER STICKS AND TAKE ® randi Manuel didn't There for the. roi come cut. When he Henry captured him. e0eesceocoe do but did Mr. e0eoceeo0ecscee000000 e ©toeoescnsacevenoeso0e e “DUDE RANCHING” CHANGES SADDLES OF OPEN SPACES BILLINGS, Mont, Feb. 25 Trends in saddlery dictated the efforts. to mect assumed require- ments of “dudes” brings dis; old time cowmen. For the edification of dude ranchers, there were displayed the meeting of the M na-wy ming association here saddles w cushioned seats, with low roll can- tles and bell fenders; highly orna- mented chaps with tooled and riv- wide belts, leather cuffs r ve One of the best known police 0i- ficials in the United States is au- thority for the statement that never hefore has such real police atmos- phere been incorporated in a mo- tion picture as in “Alibi,” now showing at the Palace Theatre. The official is Captain John Me- Caleb, commander of the Hollywood police department, who is as well known in the film capital as Charles Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks or any of the stars. McCaleb was, <o interested in the avowed ambi- tion of Roland West, producer and director .of “Alibi," to make tne production technically flawless from a police standpoint, that he spgnt‘ considerable time at the studio, giv- ing advice and watching the film- ing of the underworld thriller. | “This picture shows crooks and police as they really are, not asj fictionists most of the time depxct‘ them to the public,” said the cap-i tain. | “West shows up gangsters nnd; their ilk as cowards in the long| run. And the actors who play the‘ roles in “Alibi” act like real crooks and real police, not like actors.” ] i 2 o 7 “WATERFRONT” IS | AT PALACE SOON 4 2 et Have you ever heard of a “jin-| ka?” | Jack Mulhall, who is co-featured with Dorothy Mackail in the Firsi National production “Waterfront,”, coming to the Palace Theatre soon, | Jearned what it was while the pic-i ture was bsing filmed on the San —_— 2 Francisco Bay front. Further- | Two trans-Atlantic fliers and more, the popular star will not for- an impromptu visit. Left o right: ret what a “jinka” is for a 1ong ber of the Bremen crew on the first westward crossing, Col. Charles + A, Lindbergh, M.7/Kockl and Mgz, time to come. = DEERHERDSIN | ~ out FAMOUS ATLAI‘{TIC FLIERS MEET THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR E, TUESDAY, FEB. 25, | 930. COODSHAPEND f »oxs | RAH! RAH! al— [ i AND SAY Survey by Game Wardens Indicates Will Winter Without Any Aid . unloss | ced in | according to E: today by H. W. Terhune, Ex- er of the Alaska Game! to be well- (dications | arvation or s appear ) Wardens Homer Jewell. cruise which and west part of | 1 | on the| = ca: found tr conditior dents in t1 and it fon of 15 of opin- experienced men that there med to be no lack of feed for herds, that it was prob- 2 that y would winter with- having to be fed. e Vviolations of L were € Tw Mountain, an nt being ar d They guilty,| fined and sentenced | days in j i 9k 3 reside Tenakee fo. and with By DOROTHY HERZOG Copyright, 1930, Premier Syndicate. HOLLYWOOD, Cal, ness much better today. Much. nother like yesterc nd the boss get bitterly personal. Ah, the Alaska| d by the|P it Game e would 1 well. Roland West won't taken to Cr: “Alibi. He Mr. West finished will he work? He wor lquit taking the daily dozen be- cause it developed into work. But has story. Which is hopeful. “Love in Chicago,” by a young lad named Charles Walt. Who is was rapping out ar- son the only author extant to come to| Hollywood and get a job the first ay. (I aid print it, Harry!) | When Mr. West has a story that 't mean he goes to work. He a story for a character or a dramatic sequence or maybe a title. is no slap at Mr. Walt he cogitat And as fined $50 by Ji and nine mink taken out of on, were forfeited | to the Government an:mn:m\h’; who has re B Tenakee less than one year, d to be in Which peor physical condition, and bl with I e W into con-| w*_“f - '~ |course of weeks, N‘n'. West £l . o Pl _f"} in ‘“”’"’;' lyarn. ‘Then he goes to work. But ing sentence. Fourteen mink, tak-fyeg 5 fastidious person. He must e dn Ahe WP R MR what to him, in all sincerity, turned to Wightman. lis o good story, or he can't be o oo g 570« TS |bothered. Tripe can be purchased GENERAL MANAGER OF |[wholesale at retail prices. [ While he’s idle the financial sun still - shines Just ALASKA RAILROAD TO-G ‘man rights of his play, The Um. sold the REACH HERE TONlGH “Un‘r own Purple,” to a stellar Ger- yman actor named Albert Besser- ol. Otto F. Ohlson, {man, general of the ka Railroad,| np. yyesy was reminiscing about rive on the steamer YUkon(nay gnd this. He recollected when tonight for a conference with GOV.|pe wug twenty-one and in voodvil George A. Parks relative to he earned $500 a week. Which was 3.‘:\11 and kindred m:}d(‘x 5, it w equal to enother cipher in the days _:‘v_u-m.l today. He will proceed on | wyon money was money and not ¢ the same vessel to his headguart residential prosperity boom. Anc in Anchorage. 4 d'yuh savvy how he did ii? H Col. Ohlson has been in theliny the managers he had ten peo States several weeks. He w called | e in his cast. And he did. Bu to Wa.&h:‘ngton late last year 10|y played each part himsalf! The ,bresent his estimates for the next .ot was a crook act. He ¢ fiscal year nppropriat{;xs for oper- in 1S & has a ager 1 the salaries . All but o ation and maintenancg of.the that didat run any more and has been on the WPacific Ceast fisteen or twenty bucks per. mere recently equipment and material. buying Success! ears ego, wien D. W. Griffitl r shoot 'em at Mamaroneck, h engaged Una Merkel to double fc |Lillian Gish. Miss Merkel stood in” for Miss Gish when cn lined-up a shot. to wear her feet out |* er expression. Time lapsc This department saw Miss Merke |support Helen Hayes in “Coquette.’ She was swell. . To give a vagu( |sort of camparison, she was to the {role what Zasu Pitts can be when she goes dumb -and gawky. Merkel is now in Hollywood 2anc will traipse in D. W.s next flick “Abraham Lincoln.” She has beer under contract, not her feet. 1 Gish will “stand-in” for Mi But lackaday. and weep- 5 aint true, . Merely a coly- munist’s idea of blissful penning. More Success | This sustained cheerfulness is | Secoming depressing. But cycles iget the worse of us. Having to do |with Joan Bennett, who recently |returned from New York, in pro- duction demand. Very much so. 3he’s wanted for eleven—flicks. Not the least being as John Barrymore's heroine in a talky version of “The Sea Beast.” Recollect? That is the yarn where he had his leg chewed off by a whale and said it in torture. It's a big scene anrd as a talky should moan theatres down. To return to Miss Bennett, it isn't efinite which picture she will sign for. After all, she draws the pay- sheck from United Artists and U. A. will make the decision shortly. their wives meet in Indianapolis for Capt Herman H. Keehl, a mem- Chester Morris has leaped into a popularity reckoned in terms of 3,000 fan letiers wegkly. The ma- ljoril:/ of his admirers figure ils Lindbergh (seated in plane). —HAVE YOU “The SO With Eddie Quillar ———FOR go to work. | has been at least eight months, - They do be quoting Stan Laurel | University of Southern California. |standards of hangar space and gen- | the facilities available at any land- th('l VL R WHERE SOUND SOUNDS BEST COLISEUM A WOW! Of a 100 Per Cent All Talking Show S HAD YOUR LAU GH TODAY? THEN H i LOVE and WORD A Vitaphone Act i he turned hehroic and ittle Woman” as the| His first high time nabbed t celluloid talks to the end. ending will be “The Di-| which , smacks of irony.! he Divorcee,” a lux version Wife,” touts Norma Shear- |er in the -title. So n:ebbo-all‘sl jwell that unreels in a clinch. | {of Laurel and Hardy chuckles as; confessing just why his hair is! {scared. Stan and Babe (Hardy) ! ymade two-reeler once-upon-er | |time wherein they traipsed a vit They shaved their tive heads. Babe's hair grew normal. Stan's stood up and con- tinued to stand up. Proving even | nature is favorably interested in| his career. And—that’s all. e R e RN Soviet Strives To Reduce List 1 (Continued from Page One) ment has taken steps therefore, to make the collective farms as at-| ‘ractive as the cities. Recreational | centers are to be established in the | stale rural communities and fa- silities given for the same sort of | political and economic instruction' that is afforded city workers. i The seven hour, day and “non- | stop” working week with staggered | for all workers, are men- | tioned as other factors which will | help reduce unemployment. It 2stimated that the number of pcr-‘ soviet | is d doubled in five . 1929, the total r 000,000 and by the year it is predicted that his will have grown to above 13- 100,000, ! 1,250,000 Unemployed | Having more than a million and quarter of unemployed, and at he same time experiencing a lack | »f skilled labor, the government has pened a chain of trade schools fc wnskilled workers. These have| »een planned to instruct 130,000 in| cuse building, 200000 in factory ) vork and as many as will in tr e | \ 'peration of tractors and other arm machinery. | A definite percentage of women | nust be admitted to these lr:umnu‘; ourses. Also, in order to give a! *hance to some of the thousands | of unckilled youths who yearly en-) er the ranks of the unemployed, a ipecial. “industrialization enroll-| nent” has been instituted by the| NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME | No. 3037-A. In the District Court for the, Ter-“ ritory of Alaska, Division Number | One, at Juneau. i ‘In the Matfer of the Application| ‘ cf HANS ALFRED MODIGH to| | change -his name: from HANS, ALFRED MODIGH #o . HANS| l ALFRED MOODY. | { Public notice .48 ‘hereby given| |that 'en ‘March 15, 1920, at the| {bour of 10 o'clock a. m, a hearing | {will be had before the District| ;Court for the Territory of Alaska,| {in the United States Court House,| |at Juneau, Alaska, on the appli-| |cation filed by Hans Alfred Modigh | {in said Court on January 29, 1930, |for the changing of his name from | |Hans Alfred Modigh to Hans Al-| fred Moody, and all persons are| {required to then and there appear | and show cause, if any they have, |why said application should not be | granted. : | WITNESS the Honorable JUS-| TIN W. HARDING, Judge of said iCo\u’t. and the seal thereof, this 20th day of January, 1930. | (Seal) JOHN H. DUNN, Clerk. First publication, Feb. 11, 1930. Last publicaion, Mar. 4, 1930. I 1 People's Commissariat of Laboft RATING FOR which is planned to provide 60,000 apprentices for factories. —— ENGINEERS CHIEF TO HONOR WELFARE WORKER CHICAGO, Feb. can Association o 5—The Ameri- Engineers this yyear will name the most outstand- ing citizen in social and économic welfare work. Upon him the asso- ciation will confer the Clausen gold medal, to be given annually A board to select the cipient includes G. M. Butler, University of Arizona; C. F. Kettering, Detroit; Michael J. Pupin, New York, and R. B, von Kleinsmid, President, 2—SHOWS—2 7:30 and 9:30 EAR—SEE- ENJOY AND LAUGH AT— homore” Sall v ’Neil, Jeanette Loff ADDED LAUGHS- FOX MOVIETONEWS PATHE AUDIO REVIEW The Laugh Show of the Season Coming-“Painted Faces” landing area; and the last “A" deals with | night. lighting equipment. | Ratings are being igsued to air- |port operator on application. First |letters vary from A to D, the num- erals from 1 to 5, with a zero for unsafe fields, and the last- letters arc either A, D, E ot X. 4 " AIRPORTS 18 WASHINGTON, Feb. 25—A Fed- |impression that a field measures eral rating of airports, newly issued up to the ultimate in airpert de- from the Department of Commerce, sign, according to Clarence M. |tells the tale of available rncflmesiyoung, Assistant Secretary of Com- in symbol form merce for Aeronautics, but rather The highest rating, the first of signifies’ that minimum standards which went to the Pontiac, Mich,, |have' been met: 3 X e |airport, is known as A-1-A. Theé| The chief object of rating'is:to | first letter indicates the minmimum | tell'pilots and operators at aglance leral facilities have been met; the ing field. - [Facts Number 17 and 18] Til cofiee was packed “in vacuum, you never knew how much of its glorious flavor you had been missing. The same is true of tea. The two are identical in one respect. A little air—a little moisture—and pff'—the finer flavors are gone. With coffee it happens quickly. With tea more slowly - .bi'it,mre]y; And it is many months before tea reaches you from the tea gardens— frequently a year. Its original flavor you could never enmjoy until Schilling, by a secret process, packed tea in vacuum. . [Fact Number 167 Both atea leaf and a coffee bean must be toasted to drive off the moisture, which helps to rob it of flavor,” Good coffec 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 cardboard 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 15 todsted 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 completely protected from' the tea garden to you. The only Tea Sealed Hot in Vacuum! The only Truly FRESH Teal -

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