The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 3, 1930, Page 3

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I e P y PALACE TONIGHT Enjoy a Hearty Laugh and Hear Good Music : 1009 Song! Music! Dialog! remantic rlr,\m.x aect Gl BETTY COMPSON Ned Sparks—Jack Oakie Joseph Cawthorn Gus Arnheim’s Band Cimini Singers 100 Dancing Beautics | ) % { \ ) ) \ i \ N ; \ { ! \ ; \ 4 ] ] § N { { ] )y y 4§ N ) { \ | \ { l 0—2 ')—.;( Lo"es‘ WATCH FOR “Trial of Mar s \ | ! \ N ! g { { %._ b \ N \ ) ) \ ) ) i¢ s\ N Dugarn’® | { with NORMA SHEARER :; b e Attractions At Theatres | “STREET GIRL” IS | | SHOWING, PALACE | [+] 28| If “Street Girl,” which opened | last night at the Palace Theatre, had been a stage play, it probably would have been preceded into town by notices of an extended run on| Broadway. Indeed, if the current stage had | been presenting as entertaming{ stuff as that from which this all-| musical, all-talking Radio Picture | is made, it is doubtful if the manpa- | gers of the legitimate houses would wear such worried looks. | For “Street Girl” is one of those shows that has an appeal for every theatre-goer; there is a captivab- ing plot. There is a generous| share of fine music, and there is a wealth of personality in the tal- ¢nted cast headed by Betty Comp- ! son. | There is a generous share of com- edy in the picture, capably handled | by three veterans of the stage, Jo- | seph Cawthorn, Jack Oakie and Ned Sparks. Guy Buccola, a newcom er to the screen, adds to the har mony of the tale with his perform- ance on various musical instru- ments. Worth the. price of admission glone of the musical renditions of Gus Arnheim’s Cocoanut Grove, Ambassadors, who play the four criginal songs— My Dream Mem- ory,” “Lovable and Sweet,” “Brok- ¢n Up Tune” and “The prince of Good Fellows.” " PAINTED FACES” { NOW AT COLISEUM o 2y When it comes to being the clown and the tragedian,|Jce E. Brown wins all the laurels. In “Painted Faces,” his latest picture, 2 Tiffany- Stahl all-talking production cur- rent at the Coliseum Theatre, he plays a clown acrobat who finds himeelf the only member of a jury who is for the acquittal of a young boy on trial for murder. He knows the boy is innocent, but to prove it he has to confess that he killed a man! Finally, after five days of being tormented by eleven jurors—men and women an- xious to get out before Christmas, enly a few days off—Brown, in the German dialect of a clown, tells bi——3d lclined to m]'.:f‘ public ifor a vote of confidence Iready to give him a fierce fight as, |they seem, anxious to precipitate a POINT BARROW =2 'Winds Packmg Ice Along "y the War Department from Staff | layed by Dorothy Gulliver and %;‘3;,1 Fapbbrn, but they putover WITNESSES AT WASHINGTON DRY LAW HEARINGS . 2 L A e i WHERE SOUND SOUNES BEST QA heir song number, “Bash- i Yufll) gets a big hand. o} o Q rQ aster o1k way b s b 2 HE TALKS 2 SHOWS and he is, for he plays the | AGAIN 7:30-9:30 [ # but hé can sing, and no foolin | ’ Tne way he putq over “Someb: | ust Like You,” it is no R N:‘lrcv fell like a ton of br { STARTING ,!l ESDAY | 3 ! nle ’~ I's Al 7 | { | Y GEORGE BANCROFT TALKS AGAIN ‘ m g HUNBE@ BOLT? I | | i SURPASSES ANYTHING HI'S 5/41)] | — ; E LAST TIMES TONIGHT——— SN SRR SEEST wamwmxww 5 66 ') 2 : aarant 18 JOE BROWN in “PAINTED FACE S et to right: Rep. Ad J. Sab: t Chicago, Wi g , forme + 4 | Hep. Rowert H Elancy.of Detrot and br. £.07. Butle, who thatinds v messibs Goiony” Rugs Eletemonyomse 5t c ary mittee in Was .m;tcn on proposais for repeal or ma'lmc;dm, of elgiisanth amendment. i — SO i prehibited limited in most' — 1 s it st . al institutions prisona Second Marriage Wnll J F GALBREATH ] ‘. S B 5 . evolved el well-known \X/ . ign La Fails to Serve $250,000 Writ to transmit message | Ot or rled Over $800 OOG | Lose 3800,000 to Son ! b most elaborate ‘tap’ | N ‘knock’ code ever known to pr ! Is DEAD A FTER % ; % officials is said to have been { £ Y e by lifer’ at San Queniin. | ] 1 — repeated violations of discl- | IUNFER GAREER{ ——l he spent most of his time i - | e litary con{inement, where si- - & The (1:1?\:;:“ bolt” is at th Y }Tladcl, Pack Train Owner | Frances Porter, seum tomorrow —— e — JOHN WILLYS FOR POLAND iName Has Been Sent for Approval as Ambassa- dor from United States l\mrch 3—The WASHING ['JN, name of John Willys, of Toledo, itomobile manufacturer, has been sent to Poland by President for approval as American Am- The White the s Hoo- Little John M. Coward, 3rd, is too t mes the bride of Lee Wingate S e " _tcrms of the late John M. Coward’s will, the re-mar ger val of & G dow automatically diverts the ab Wars: ed reliab that Will r the ap- pointment. Some time ago Wil his autcmobile busines: his entering the foreign dir service. TARDIEU HAS NEW CABINET, By ROBBIN COO HOLLYWOOD, March 3. Flicker greatly concerned over the prospect of the $800,000 legacy | rain upon him when his mother, Mrs. Audrey Loder Coward, engrossed in his sand digging *o Under the age of the The boy’s Carroll this Sprin; ove sum to the son. late father was the well-known shoe manufacturer. Gintarnatlonal Nowsraal) ) JJ]‘.I\ Me- 1d find a one-word title “I Hear You Calling futures: press Wlu Seek VO[C on Confi-| "1t 100ks like another close shave |Una Merkel, cast “Ann R for Chester Morris, the “Alibi” n Griffith “ ham L)n- dence. = Radlcals' Are |crook . . . He had his hair shorn |col used to be and-in- Wallmg fOl' Hlm | recently. - for ‘‘Sergeant Grischa,” for Lillian Gish {and now, at another studio, he’s Brown, director, usually m: PARIS, March 3.—Camille Tar-|to play the lead in “The Big|to play some bit in all his own dieu has completed formation of a |House,” one of the jail-break talk- | pictures. new Cabinet and he probably will |ies He'll be a convict, ot‘ RS Rebeltion go before the Chamber of Deputies | course. Thuy Geerge He. will not have a very much |Sion of stronger position in the C‘lamb'\r‘G‘Ak § than previously as the Left wing | Disraeli,” one of the actor’ especially the Radical-Socialists are vehicles . . . Erno Rappe, formerly | conductor of music at the Roxy in New York, has arrived to be musi- ¢ cal director-in-chief for a talkle iplant . . . “Rosalie,” recent Zi feld musical comedy, is to be put Arliss is to do talki ‘Old English,” thy play which was ver- | the John like general election. stage engagemen: Leiore returning to movie. Janet Gaynor will be starred in “Common Clay” . Jetta Goudal| is the feminine lead in the French version of “The Unholy Night Andre Luguet, imported Pa r, opposite her . . . John Gar- k plays with Jeanettz MacD ald in “Bride €8,” the Arthur Ha: merstein film opereita. IS ICE BOUND with Coast from 25 to 40 Feet High WASHINGTON, March 3. — Ai message from the world’s most northerly radio station, Point Bar- row, Alaska, saying the inhabitants | |there will lose their summer unless ce conditions change and will suf- fer ice all the year, was received | Jottings Bilie Dove stars in ‘*‘Cne N be . Albertina b without one of whose ballets no musical talkie seems shle to strug- gle aleng, is Mrs. Dimitri T.om in private life . . ' Tiomkin, R sian composer-pianist writes mu for talkies . . . Mrs. Neill Han ton surprised her husband with | birthday party recently. Stepin ~ Fetchit, temperamental . Sergeant Stanley Morgan, incharge of the Point Barrow station Morgan said the winds are pack- ing the ice along the coast an forming bars from 25 to 40 feet| high and there are fo south winds. dark comedian, This may mean keepinz oub ships to IHal Roach for comedies now . from the sccuog |“Song o' My Heart” is the ‘onc— when he was unknown to fans t or dom now, . Alice Joyce is to play c E. Bar ) srican Honey Institute, who spc Barnard eaid. £as., is under coniract p.y Oakie, under p to Wesley Ruggles, 5 he has b the di- getting ceiving from $1,000 to 81, @ by “farming him out.” Oakie gned with Ruggles at $75 a three Nearing star- years ago. he’s trying to breal ontract. “Becs Knee's Is Now Ho Longer Just a Pun TNDIANAPOLILS, Ind., March 2.- Believe it or not a bee has kn> of this rests on Dr. I d, President of th Proof " Indiana State Bee jation convention but Helen' Ware is to gy “There is no lack of in that slang expression. A six legs and the legs s0 the bee .must ha Charliec Adams cf Dodge City, captured a monkey that h: m a carnival, The mon- self itst aped fix immediately appointed ther to Adam’s cat. Flying Hospital—That Also Swims Uncle Sam’s largest seaplane, which has just successfully undergone a series of rigid tests at his story. Helen Foster is a dainty, ador- able moarsel as Nancy, and the vau- deville tcam is not only delightfully port, or a hosp! Yard, Philadelphia, Pa,, in +plane is capable the Philadelphia Naviy £ b e L. e g lig] ington, D. C. preparation for its Although primarily a passenger transport plane, equipped to ? carry fourteen passengers and mazil, - the eraft may be quickly converted into a bomb- er or torpedo ship, a 20-passenger tro ' trans- ital air ambulance. e new of carrying two Mark IV tor- cdoes weighting 1,800 pounds each. (International Newsreol) nal con- while Ruggles was re- | th2 ¢ , men2y should be used by the Queen | . MAYOR’S JOB HELD » the mother of a family—only on a| Succumbs Following show girl, Long Illness has brought a suit against | (Special Correspondence) Conkey P: | WRANGEL, Alaska, Feb. 27.—J. W hitehead; | Frank Calk pioneer trader millionaire [Bki, B. . coceum, tara. Jove b riornnes-c ol e o Atlanta-and illness which ended in a paralytic New York.. | stroke Februars Th it ;partnm'. Jo! s poorh |riyed, in Wi by’ fi"d. oot |ago from Sca 3 Miami, for Telegraph Creek with a dogteam but February 27. Calbreath leaves four process servers grown children, ©n daughter and have |three son His brother, known been unable te {in the F: country as “Cas- locate . the slar Jim,” died at Nenana about elusive | bwO' years a sportsman. | Frank Calbreath the son of |gohn calbreatn !neer who es ished the first trad- ing post at Telegraph Creek, and operated the first pack train over the 72-mile portage across the Pa- cific-Arctic divide between the Sti- California pio- kine River and Dease Lake, in the 1 early Seventies. It was known as | |the “Diamond C” outfit. Calbreath ——— g e y = R Mrs. Audrey Loder Coward, widew 'used the Aparajo pack and his |} SUBSLS S SUS of the \\(‘All’hy shoe manufacturer, |conductors are still called “carga- Sh POSSE BF m whose_marriage to Mr. Lee Win' | dcres,” after the Spanis 1 Catanll i A SRR WIORE | et o oiaiet . e .r $800,000 of the huge fortune |ST'8IN2 packcr 6 | 155t by her husband. Under the |{rom California, but Indlans have En Extra Wide | tarms of the will, Mrs. Coward’s ireplaced them in recent years. ithful to their trust these Indian packers wear chaps, spurs, and six- 7 \lguns, and a few can handle -a Slxleen Yea . L)ld BO‘ Causes Tragic Affair “:umt | in New Mexico g Pack Animals Stampeded The first caterpillar tractor which ! ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico, March 3~—Bonifacio Torres, '1::‘1 | made its appearance in the Cassiar ;Ll 1924 was anathema to Calbreath, 1 It stampeded his pack ‘animals. He 16 years, who earlier last Saturda mornifa. shot threée officers when they sought to arrest Aim cn com-| predicted failure for the miners |who started freighting ‘across: the plaint ©f the boy's mother that- he was drunk . and incorrigible, - was divide with it. In the spring of 11925 the Hudson's -Bay' Company shot and killed by @ Deputy Sheritt in his homé where he had barri- brought in two more. The old }packer‘s prediction was true in a 1measure, however, for the clay hills ,aqeq himself and hed held off a March 3 gwere impassible in wet Ylesther, posse of 200 men for hours. | . The Calbreath trains: sbill freight Deputy Sheriff Remendo Lovato leaped through a first floor window of ‘the house and was shot, while cthers were firing on tk2 boy from Ambassador Alexander P,|3Cr0ss the mountains “to Dease : Lake, and supplies for the Domin- another direction after the house had been fired. 2as bequepthed to Queen Wt Quat {ion Telegraph stations as far norih second marriage automatically di- verts this sum to her son, John M. rloward, 3d. Shoe! © MOURE GVES - SUM T0 QUEEN Understood Will Bequeaths‘ $100,000 for Queen’s Charities TITTSBURGH, Penn, —The Sun-Telegraph Sunday said THE WEBSTER /1 Flox. sheun Shoe i trouble getting a shoe wide enough latz $10 % Sp?:ds:lg%g?g;‘ c\"“fle: fas the head of the Taku and as far south os Halfway House, are still transported by Diamond C. horscs. of Frank Caloreatly's ill be deplorzd by spo:ismuen - et raeabers of th2 “omlinson family of Hillsboro, Tex., have been core was a former Amb) ssador | to s.mn and admired the activities H. S, GRAVES iof the Quean in relief to the poor. ’everywhere. for the Dian}and O raduated from Texas Christian ced Martit, oflguidcs are known internationally. Unlverslt;fi taiban e the re A few of the notables who hunted i SRR LA The auth.'fi‘. post of the bequest and M‘J wnt;b“" game with Calbreath’s men are| pNew Ulm, Mian., ha ther a |Lord Lascalle x England, Farod |anding field nor an alrplane, but {Von Homberg Austria, Yueff citizens there have formad an avia- Kamel of Egypt, and Cecorge BWast- Mcn b. ! e man. To Resume Career prokably - the will stipulated the| » 2 P WAL s b Toi f | { { ] i { { )\ } l' or men who have -t i i ——d in her charitics. o AR G L FOTPRLT S DGO S e R “Tomorrow’s Styles SAME AS MOTHER’S| ; Today” WATFORD, Englands March 3—| A woman who believes that being a mayor is the same job es being| Bargain Table Specials larger! scale — has been elcclnd‘ Mayor of Watford, Our remaini i Mrs. A, F., Broad s a firm LQ-; N StOCk ki liever in the maxim that a wom- | an's first duty in life is to her husband and her thldren but— | “When she has done her job in| |the home,” says Mrs. Broad, “then | is the time for her to step into | public life. A town is anly a femily ‘ SWEATERS Only $3.50 Each |on a larger scale.” | This Woman mayor, who is a| grandmother, has assured her | P LTR gES L townsgeople that she will not inter- | fere with anything to do with roads | or any, scheme having enginesring technicalities about which she knows nothing. | “I shall give my attention to those things only that I know | something about,” she says. “Others | I shall Jeave fo experts. My con- | cern will, be the things that affect |the ordinayy man, his wife and | ;e:i:;:.:‘m““r“r * g9 1o | their children,” 1‘ el ! R HERON PUTS OUT LIGHTS | BY PERCHING ON WIRES roken stock to go at $2.50 EACH Assockited Phote Alma Rubens, um-. arrived In New York from Holl, d eager to The highest raflroad .east of the { Missiesippi River is at Balsam, N. a lc, in the heart of the Ballam 5 \‘\muntalns Juneau’s -‘Own Store | | PLYMOUTH, Wis., 'March 2.— farm community near here was| | without Bleetricity all of one night | {when a heron perched on a 2300- | volt power Hne and its tail came in contact with an adjoining wire.| | The resulting short circuit put out| the heron’s ‘light” and also the, ‘llghts in the surrounding farm PHONES 83 OR 35 “The Store That Pleases’ ' THE SANITARY GROCERY A¥

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