The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 28, 1930, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, FEB. 28, 1930. BRSO WHERE SOUND SOUNDS BEST By Popular COLISEUM i LAST TIMES TONIGHT AND THEN GONE THE LAUGH OF LAUGHS "The SOPHOMORE” 0 R llllllllillI|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIImlmlllllllllmlmlllllllllilllllllIIIHIIIIllf : AHOY THERE, YOU ENTERTAINMENT £ | The Happy Day Soon LOVERS! PALACE TONIGHT ‘WATERFRONT’ dany a stormy wind shall blow till you s Come down to the 2 SHOWS—2 By Popular Request 7:30—9:30 LLUU UL TR T Alice Day, Iovely screen star, vho will wed Jack Cohn, broker, actress. in Paris, according to an announcement ' in Hollywood, . made by Mrs. IreneDay, mother of the actress. (Internationa’ Newsreel) (HHTH] 6 FORGET AND SAVE SUNDAY TO SEE “Painted Faces” ; 100 Per Cent All Talling IIII|||l|||||||||||||||7|_|,|llllm!llll|i|iHIN|llflllllll"lllfl,‘""ll""[l||||l]fl[||l|||||[fl 'Would Keep Children S TS Out of All Theatres what you want IN PRINTING when you want it! Try us out with your next job i e another show like this SATURDAY ONIiNY A Complete Change of Program : COMING “Thunderbolt” v O O ¢ with DOROTHY MACKAILL and JACK MULHALL A Tirst National Picture T AL a double—registering the @ @ @ o ¢ o 0 ¢ 0 ¢ ¢ 0 o emotions a Prince natur- e % when cavorting among e POLIC AN ° BY HIS COUG ' AFIRE ( [ DROPS | Aviator’s Bravery Wins | Two Medals in 4 Months Va “SMALL TALK” OUR GANG FIRST TALKIE officer was his camera- iring production. e . MOSLEMS TREK : JACK TO HOMES | [N JUGO-SLAVIA ROBERT M. BERRY sciated Press Correspondent) nd, Feb. police- in his burst into as riding man ROME, Feb. 28 not be aliowed music halls, said a resolution of the Italian national orgs fon for maternial and infancy. . | To combat the sinister influences |t | Minors in should movies and H 2 man trouser: flames a bicyc This w | stuck to it who trea tually verified The cough drops, it seems, contained potassium chlorate. Carried lo: in the pocket, they had come into contact with the ohorous on the side of empty safety match box, whereupon na- ture took its course. HAMPTON our e duty with young officer s EPISODE OF ACE OF SCOTLAND YARD TALKIE LT R T G UU RO U LR LR TR story and he nd the doctor is burns even- of indoor amusements of that sort on the young, the organization's directorate urged more public play- ing flelds, of which there are now 351 in the country. | In the sports field, Italy should take the United States as a model, enother resolution said. It cited the striking examples of Bingham- ton, N. Y., where the five y in- creased recrentional facilities for | boys and girls reduced juvenile delinquency cases from 100 to three per annum. METROTONE NEWS Events in Sound i Matheny, Lieut. D ELKS HALL Saturday Night —Loges 75 cents i | f | i d for outsta: d the Soldiers me e of peac risks he took 3 | 30 when a bombing p! . | flown by the officers to F ma caught fire r a Ni jungle and in a landing 2 Thrown e unhurt, but |drenched with gasoline, Mathe: rushed to the flaming plane where! C d sat in a d His cloth- flames, Canfield ran for the to be tackled by hi: nion, who himself caught IRHETIH By ¥ COMING ALL TALKING——ALL MUSIC——DRAMATIC SENSATION “STREET GIRL” £ with BETTY COMPSO 00 (As lo I BELGRADE, Jugo-Slavia, Feb. 28.' ® |—This Kingdom is preparing to ® \welcome back to Moslem communi-i® ® © ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ o ties in Bosnia and Herzegovina sev- ¥ B thousand adherents of Mo- and covered her face with a thick' edanism who went to Turkey veil. | bl USRI k! The train sioppea and sie gob!| e ion or he return rel out. She was met by a man wear- | has been obtained through the 4 o ‘mg a fez, and as the train moved Jugo-Slavian Minister to Angora. |on the ex-fashionable woman could Abdut 150,000 Mussulmen chose . i be seen walking meekly behind her Turkish citizenship under the op- ! : t | husband. }tant clauses of the post-war treat- "y o ivec piocured the explana- es when the Austro-Hungarien em- |y, that it was impossible for any oire broke up. Turkey did its best| posnian woman to adopt modern for them, furnishing lands and f- | jqoqs or dress publicly, as it would fering such other encouragement 88 1 on ostracism he condition of its treasury would | ___ l/eeoeeceoco0ecssecsecocensse forced — — and cl and LUSHUTEN | in the Paris club; and in each “Strect Girl” has appeared this son these tunes have quick ceme favorites with local or John Harron, Jack Oakie Sparks, Joseph Cawthorn, Ivan Leb- |ir edeff and Eddie XKane he ¥ supporting cast which Wesley gles directed , | the adventu { |musicians in a cafe of New York’s |hospital for Matheny is 26 3 te of Marquette university. joned at L The Cheney in memoy *¥ | Cheney, k FoLGer FLAVOR Different from all others—the true rich flavor of Central American rare mountain coffees = Attractions At Theatres The stery tells of a little group of |While Matheny was confined to a eol: many of them found they. '™ could not withstanding the rigors of he climate in 15 to ) h were An- sther outstanding handicap was uage, the transplated folk ing only Serbian and finding, i to impossible, with their talents, to master Turkish. { Reforms Cause Trouble | Many others became dissatisfied | when Mustapha Kemal started his| westernization reforms. The Bal-| | ars old, a gradu- | He dance nall, reminisc ! of the days when the famous San! 5 % 2 Francisco Barbary Coast was the|,, COMING TO COLISEUM most talked of place on the Pa-| # 5 | cific Coast, is one of the many| Joe E. Brown comes to the Coli- |collision at Fo highlights in “Waterfront,” the|Seum Sunday in the role of a clown| Donors are M y First National picture co-featuring |8crobat in the Tiffany all-talking |field, Peterboro, N. H., Dorothy Mackaill and Jack Mulhall | Picture “Painted Faces,” in which |Ruth Cheney Streeter, Mo which is showing at the Palace to-|he has the leading support of Hel- |N. J., mother and sister o night, jen Foster, Barton Hepburn, Doro- |ficer. The award includes a bronze Bravery brought two medals in four mohths to Lieut. Wil- liam A. Mgantheny, young flier. He is shown with the Cheney award which he won. DYEING TIME Experts call “You might say our pictures are The dance hall scenes are en-|thy Gulliver, Lester Cole and many hanced by. more than 300 extra: all recruited from San Francisco's waterfront in order the proper color for the action. The orchestra consisting of two piano: two trap drummers, four violins and a saxophone, is one that plays nightly’ on a passenger steamer which sails between Los and San Francisco. “Waterfront” was directed b William A. Seiter from an origi-| nal story by Gertrude Orr and Angeles | other well-known artists, Though “Painted Faces,” |ten by Frances Hyland, is story, it opens in a vaudeville th: atre, switches to a courtrcom and Jury room and then to the circus. ‘ The circus story is told by one| jof the twelve jurors—the only one who, in a murder trial, holds out | |through weary days, for ncquntal.‘ This juror is the clown, Beppo, vho knows the boy on trial did| | writ- {not commit the crime and yet who plaque and $500. The Soldiers medal established as an award for m in time of peace. — e slow motion because of course the nic movement in the body will tolerate only a limited amount of X-ray energy.” - FILMS OWN AIR EPIC PERIENCE IN CLOU was ree hero- MOTION PiCT TAK OF THE INTERNAL ORGANS WAL OF SUNINGDALE, ngland, Feb. 25 —Everybody in Hollywood has made at least cne air epie, so the Pr of Wales had to film one too Although he's rather late wi it's a safe bet he would have DETROIT, Feb. 28—Within the last year it has become possible to take motion pictures of the inte of the human body, says a report of Dr. H. A. Jarre of Grace Hos- nee | kan Moslems are nothing if not | conservative and the edicts against | such distinctly Mohammedan cus- | toms as the veiling of women and | w ng of the fez by men,| | irked them sorely. This was illustrated by a scene | witnessed recently cn an interna- | express train maki the | jeurney from Vienna to Be! de. In one of the compartments was a woman dressed in a well-cut tailor-mede dress, smart hat, silk | nd elegant foot-wear— h powdered cheeks JUNEAU it the world's We have a fresh stock of Put- nam’s Diamond Dyes, Tintex and Rit—for tinting or fast dyeing. All colors—and no- kolor bleach. Juneau Drug Company (inest flavor |pital to the Radiological Society of 4 { I # Free Delivery Phone 33 Will Chappel. The. supporting cast |is afraid to tell his story. includes Frances Hamilton, Ben! Beppo's story is full of lauv,hs.1 Hendricks, Knute Bricson, James tears and romance and the color | Bradbury, §r., Pat Harmon, Bill|and glamor and trappings of a cir- | Bailey and others. cus. He speaks in a German dia- | ilect and gets his words delight[ullyi |twisted. It is a perfect role for | the varied talents of Joe Brown, who has himself been acrobat and | 5 b ’| Al Rogell directed “Painted the laurels of Romeo and Juliet. F » o g Eddic Quillan, Pathe’s brilliant | T2 G Witk Ahe Glous ieun young comedian, and Stanley Smith, |°f Hattons—Frederick and Fanny— | wrote the dialogue. It was re- handsome young juvenile, are the : ® | corded by RCA Photophone. T COLLEGE PLAY O TONIGHT, COL latest to portray Shakespeare’s im- mortal sweethearts, e The occasion a sequence of COUNTY HIGHWAY PROBLEMS “The Sophomore,” a Pathe dialogue! AfpED BY AERIAL MAPPING picture at the Coliseum for the last | yoed wie | times tonight, in which a college| WASHINGTON, Feb. 28—Snap-| play is put on by an all masculine |ghots from the sky are displacing | cast to obtain funds for the foot-|glq mapping surveys for county | ball team enterprises.- Eddie dons highways, says the county high- the flowing draperies of Juliet and|way officials' division of the Am-| Stanley the tights and furbelows erican Road Builders Association. | of Romeo. And how you'll laugh| Stanley Abel, Kern County, Cali- when you see them! {fornia, committee member in| “The Sophomore,” adapted trom]charge, says aerial maps have dis- | a serial story running in College tinct advantage over the best de Humor, was brought to the screen tailed line maps of cultured are under the direction of Leo Mc- |in that they show the entire area | Carey. Its mirth provoking se-jxn complete detail, bringing every quences are capably handled by a building, tree, pavement, and struc- cast which includes, in addition to |ture to scale. | Eddie in the featured role and| An aerial map reveals in detfllf young Smith in an important char- |the danger element in county roads | acterization, Sally O'Neil, Jeanette |located along section lines and jog- Lotf, Lew Ayres and Jimmie Aldine. |ging at right angles for a turn.| i Topographic conditions are exposed | e £2|and drainage areas may be quickly | FAMOUS ORCHESTRA | ]Rnd accurately computed. | | AT PALACE SUNDAY || s ot & R 77| FIVE HORSE CABS SURVIVE One of the most famous grches- ) tras in the country will entertain; SAO PAULO, Feb. 28.—The horse patrons of the Palace Theatre m:xt!xs all but eliminated from this Bra- Sunday, when “Street Girl,” the all- zilian city where there are 21512 talking and all musical Radio Pic- 'motor cars and only five horse- ture featuring Betty Compson, drawn public conveyances. These opens. five are at the railroad stations Gus Arnheim and his Cocoanut in the early morning and their Grove Ambassadors, now playing at steel-tired wheels can be heard for the Ambassadeurs Club in Paris,|blocks. appear in several of the night club| sequences of the Radio Picture. Reports for fiscal year ending Four musical numbers, written'June 30, 1929, show state and com- originally for “Street Girl,” are be- | monwealth railweys of Australia ing featured by Arnheim and his are operated at greater loss each band as they play for the dancersyear, | —v-—— North America. no difficu lling it in the Amer- “Until a year ago,” he says, “we jcan film ital, for he is the star depended upon visual observations g he - supervisor d0f this aerial on the fluoroscopic screen, but in But the film is for his pri- some x-ray studies the objects ob- coilection. tained in this way are too faint “Now we have an apparatus re- sembling a moving picture which shows us many things we could not learn from a photogroph Prince of his ies of 7ith th c all set for 5. In subsequent scenes s shown in full flight—himself a s & WESTE‘Rfi é}IRLS TRAIN FOR MIAMI SWIM MEELT and lightly ~olored 1ips i Women “Fail” ! As the train approached Brod,| where a change has to be made for the Bosnian , the woman took down a sul carefully laid her stylish hat in it, threw over her shoulders a long blue mantie which reached her heels, fixed a broad whife linen collar round her neck | Assaciated ress I'hoto Four water lassies training for the Los Angeles Athletic club relay swimming team which will be entered In the national A. A, U. champlionships Miami, Fla, March 13 to 16. They are, left to rightt Jennie Cramer, Georgla Coleman, national 10-foot diving title holder; Josephine McKim, national gll-round champion, and 91Iv0 M:tch._ Posl Offlce Substation No. 1 PHONES 83 OR 85 “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” Spring Modes Feature the Chic Suit and Tailored op Coat Fashion schedules these trig finger-tip Jacket Suits with either plain or flared skirt., with clever blouses to complete their smart- ness. In all the wanted shades. Coats have a sophisticated air with a difference which is most pleasing. See These At—— Juneau’s Own Store “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY -

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