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- “THE DAILY-ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE. 18, 1930. - e e - — - - ny [ o York Or PALACE London Applauds New Ygrk Orchesira WHERE SOUND SOUNDS BEST . i ‘A 10,000 at Royal Alb 1 j 1 T Y R, " 1t Dall Bajey TONIGHT i TONIGHT ' TONIGHT at at A R % 3 7:30--9:30 7:30--9:30 METRO- ODDPITY 3 cifnam s i TONE PHOTOPHONE Moz\ig;one . R * WILL ROGERS LAUREL and HARDY TR Sk 4 . 8 ‘in ¥ WRONG 441 They Had to See Paris LOVE, HONOR, and 0-O-H BABY— T o | ALL TALKING FOX MOVIETONE COMEDY-DRAMA S WILL ROGERS, funnier than ever qualifies as the warld’s greateste nat- i ural talking actor in a comedy of Gay Paree. 'HEAR HIM SING— — e # . I 1@ “I Could Do It For You.” The glittering story of a “perhaps” marriage that is a laughing certainty. New pink undies, and the girls | VITAPHONE ACTS MOVIETONEWS who wear ’em will tickle you pink. Charlie Chase, | Jean Hersholt and Kathryn Crawford will give you 4 . the laugh of a lifetime. o A Part Talkie Program This IS Entertainment 10—25—50—Loges 75 cents COMING— BILLIE DOVE mn “CAREERS” WATCH FOR— “OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS” Attractions At Theatres “MODERN LOVE” ON TONIGHT AT PALACE Perhaps the most hilarious com- . edy feature shown locally in many months is “Modern Love,” the Uni- j versal picture which opened yes- ‘ terday at the Palace theatre. ! Heading the cast are Jean Her- ¢ sholt, Charley Chase and Kathryn Crawford, all well-known and more ! than adequate in their roles. Their } mirth-making is spectacular in its power to arouse the risibilities of , audiences, and every performance was greeted with outbursts and ;galcs of laughter. i The story is based on modern i marriage on a fifty-fifty basis, and Arch B. Heath, the director, has w@iven this picture an unusually hu- man as well as an amusing twist. ! JIt is difficult to say whether the :goung wife, in love with her hus- and and wanting to keep her mar- ‘iriage a secret in order that she nay not lose her position, is to be #censured, but at any rate one Jwonders how so many amusing ricomplications can be packed into Lone film. b4 feooo0o0eccccccoe e WILL ROGERS IN REAL !¢ LAUGH SHOW, TONIGHT leeeeeeeoeccoev oo ' The much heralded Fox Movie- [tone all talking comedy drama, ‘Will Rogers is both heard and seen, opened an engagement at the | Coliseum last night. It is a laugh riot from beginning high spots in which Rogers reveals himself not only as a comedian, but as an emotional actor of un- usual power. did cast which includes the charm- ing and talented Marguerite ! Churchill, the sparkling and artful Fifi Dorsay, Owen Davis, Jr., Irene Rich, Rex Bell, Ivan Lebedeff and | Theodore Lodi. the of a Peters, owner happy garage in Clearwater, in and he is made rich. His real troubles begin when his wife in- sists on going abroad. Father, mother, son and daughter make [the trip in grand style, and, once in the foreign atmosphere, the am- bitious Mrs. Peters is determined to marry her daughter, Opal, to a title. Mrs. Peters buys her way into so- ciety but encounters no end of trouble in educating Pike to her grand ideas. The limit is reached when Marquis de Coudray attempts to tap Pike for half a million dol- lars as compensation for marrying Opal. Then the fur flies, And so does the fun. ® 00009 000000 00 ¢ “DANCING DAUGHTERS" e ¢ COMING TO THE PALACE o e 0 eeevcccsscene South, East and West are repre- sented in the three. leading femi- nine players who appear in “Our Dancing Daughters,” which opens soon. at the Palace Theatre. Rogers is supported by a splen-| Rogers enacts the role of Pike| and contented | Oklahoma, until his oil well comes | |to end, with occasional dramatic|JoSePhine Lovett. | supporting | Orchestra scored a triumf{: their initial concert at tian and Anita Page, who play the important roles in the Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer cinematic story of modern youth, are all different types and come from different parts of the United States. Harry Beaumont directed the pro- duction from an original story by In the stellar cast are Nils Aster, Kathlyn Williams and Eddie Nu- gent. ——t——— Try the Five 0'Cleck Dinner Speeials at Mabry’s. ~—adv French-fried potatoes can be done to'a turn if tooked few AT A TIME Hirrs Bros. Coffee is “done to a turn” because only a few pounds at a time pass through the roasters. That's Con- trolled Roasting— Hills Bros.” patented, continuous process ~—and it creates a flavor no other coffee has. | Fresh from the original vacuum \pack. Easily opened with the key. HILLS BROS COFFEE Arturo Toscanini and the New York - Philharmonic = Symphony n yal sNtm DAwES. 10,000 pe;som. Besides the royal family the audience in- cluded George Bernard Shaw and Ambassador Dawes. (International Newsreol ArTUR0 ToscANINT Albert Hall, London. King George and Queen Mary were present at the performance, I which was attended by fully LONDON—A" symphony concert’""""' conductor and -his American % lorchestra ed in the Italian orchestra from the Land of Jazz| appear bas just conquered all Europe! }(.mmnl. Observers said that such Led by the eminent conductor, @ burst of enthusiasm has never Arturo Toscanini, the New York“l’"‘“ known in all Ron_xan history. Philharmonic Orchestra’s foreign! When his troubles with the Duce {tour has been greeted in all the Were aired, the New York Philhar- great musical capitals over here |mOnic organization offered Tosca- |with a wild acelaim, absolutely un- |11 $60,000 a year for forty con- !known in recent concert history. |ccrts- Although many of the play- All the centers of old-world cul- |[¢'s are foreign-born or of foreign ture—Milan, Rome, Paris, Berlin, |Darentage, the orchestra was back- Vien and London—have placed |¢d and founded by Americans. their stamp of approval upon the | 2 American organization as the most |dcr the brilliant Italian master has |@istinguished classical orchestra in [Proved that the New York orches- the world. tra is the finest group of mu- I L sicians, assembled in decades. o ondon, King George and | Thus it is that the United States, |Queen Mary were in the audience ') berated as'the home of ear- ;;71‘”1(;1}(3({.pgs«:ni that h.,ten(dl I olitting jazz, can now boast its breathless awe “to the matchless| ;i once ‘in the fleld of classical performance given by the Nr-v.';‘_””cl‘”’ music. York group. All present seemed | AT T clectrified at the perfection of the| yers' response to the great maes- | command. Historic Albert Hall | Uses Surgery to Treat {rocked with thunderous applause | Tuberculosis Patients jafter the rendition of each num- e | ber. | PITTSBURGH, June 18. — Sur- |, The Philharmonic concerts: in/ ry is used here with some sue- in the treatment of serlous s of tuberculosis, according to Howard Marcy, medical direc- {" In Ml " g tor of the Tuberculosis Hospital. L a2 “ f”t“b“ WHR rye‘“'s a0 T”} The basis of the operation is to ‘C"”:I"u ‘”ll ":“:mp_ !‘?"'(S’"'S]""o”'\_(v“pm'mn the diseased lung to heal fox o e ilustrious La Scala Opera|yy giyiyy it o rest, it having been Orchestra, the occasion of his re- A ! & found that the motion of a lung in turn was the subject of continued rial bpavation: TWiithtes " the: i |cheers and shouts of “Bravo!» ' |DOrmal operation ' icers produced in it by disease. In The vast erowds that hailed the A IhS "Aiabnakd Torzan. s |orchestra in Rome, proved that|§0me cases the diseased organ Is inoperative, leven in the patriotic Eternal City, Yendered permanently t art knows no nationality. but in all instances, the operations | Some time ago Toscanini left |8re not attempted unless the re- {Ttaly because he refused to play Maining lung is thought capable the Fascisti hymn in one of his|Of sustaining the whole burden of !Milan Opera Orchestra concerts.| breathing. |The great leader was reported gs| Critical cases, Dr. Marcy con- \having told Mussolini that the pioce}tinued. are treated by removal |destroyed the harmonious effect of [Of sections of 11 ribs on the side Ihis programme and consequently, of the diseased lung, resulting in though a loyal Fascist, he would|the permanent destruction of the not play it. ]lung. but without any deformity But this was forgotten when the resulting to the patient, since the Berlin, were received with a mad | |enthusiasm that has not been |, |Leard since the great musical days ). [before the World War. g #“They Had to See Paris,” in which o] o - ¥ i i Joan Orawford, Dorothy Sehas-'@ o — 7 i i SO, I " Water Sports Smoker Fireworks The present triumphant tour un- | Not a real beauty, she photas graphs beautifully, but it is hét singing and dancing, and her abil« ity as a comedienne, that may make & movie star of her ere loxg. A Real Pilot Laura was born in Brooklyn ' [nearly 20 years ago, one of five sisters. By RODEIN COONS Checkers is her favorite indoor HOLLYWOOD—H Olara Bow Is|8Port, and outdoors she flies, being Brooklyn’s bonfire, there’s @ new [qualified to pilot her own plane girl out here who is Brooklyn's{if she had one. bubbling blaze. During a show in Milwatkee she Laura Lee is a laughing Lorele), jcaught the thrill of the alr and a slim and pepful little blonde {On her next vacation she. ret with enthusiasm that bubbles inex: [to study aviation. haustibly without getting on one's | g~ nerves. Nothing so far has daunted her galloping spirits, and she tackles work and long ‘hours with as little reluctance as a starying. chorus girl attacking a filet mignon. When a weighty microphone fell and hit her in the ribs, she. only caught her breath and proceeded with her song and dance. 1 | “Tomorrew’s Sby,es ; * To day" Bathing Suits Showing a grouping of new models in a- price range to please every member of the family. PRICE— . $3.75, $4.50, Wim and Wigor That's the sort of trouping Laura began learning when she wenit on the stage at the age of 12, as a bona fide Gus Edwards discovery— ' every other actress or so in Holly- | wood is supposed to be one. Anyway, she and her mother | asked Edwards to give.her a job,! and shé got a featured spot in his revue. ‘ Ay That led to vaudeville in: New York, where Earl. Carroll saw her and engaged her for his “Vani-, tles.” Next came a three-year contract with the Shuberts, and ‘then her call to Hollywood to play oppasite Joe E. Brown in “Top Speed.” Since then she has been signed on contract, and is now making her third talkie, all opposite Brown, And in “Top Speed,” at least, she all but steals the picture from the big-mouthed comic whe is him- .season. He|self one of the most notorious picture-stealers hereabouts. Ageaciated Erese " 'Kenrieth Harlan of th, Dorls Hilda Booth will be:married soon in Hollywood, Cal. operation is performed beneath the muscles which remain intact . “We have had a fair degree of success,” Dr. Marcy said, “hav- ing salvaged about 40 per cent of the cases operated on.” e Charley Irvin, a Wyoming cow- boy, was the leading race owner at the last ‘Aurora, I, had 13 winners. e e i SRS a2 — Juneau’s Community Celebration Baseball Fun i Illlllllulllllllulmflllllilf "t‘lvll,yfllvull'lmllll.ll T Y T : CALIFORNIA GROCERY £ PHONE478 The Home of Better Groceries Dance