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snappiest dialogue thus far heard on the talking sereen. “CZAR OF BROADWAY” CONTINUES AT PALACE ° —e Legitimate business enterprises of- ten mask the movements of the modern gangsters. An insurance agency with palatial offices in a city skyscraper forms the “home’ office for a crowd of gangsters in | the Universal production, “Czar of | Proadway,” which again plays at |the Palace theatre tonight. | city politicians are thrown into terror by gangster bosses, whose in- fluence extends over both the ju- dicial and executive ends of the | governments of many of our mod- |ern cities. Bankers and business | men are forced into embarrassing }pnsmcns by these plotters of the underworld whose most lucrative ‘pcssession is a racket of some kind. Charley Chase | Posing as respectable businessmen 3 | they are in positions of great ad- Talking Comedy vantage to-direct the maneuvers of “CZAR | their gangs. This forms the basis of the sto 'Czar of Broadway.” Broadway” “Now showing in the larg- est theatres throughout the country 10-25-75—Loges $1.00 PALACE AGAIN TONIGHT PHOTOPHONE SOUND (QuiTLTNT TALKING REPORTER Movietone Act The Capitolians WANT INFORMATION REGARDING 3 MEN | Staff Captain Acton, of the Sal- vation Army, stationed at Wran- gell, Alaska, has asked the United States Marshal's office for trace of the following persons: Carl Oskar Ahnstrom—Born at 0 Oskarshamm, Sweden, March 186, WATCH FOR 1879, blond hair, blue eyes, gold - Madame X miner. Last heard from in March, 1928. His address then was Rapids, Big Delta, Alaska. His son is the inquirer. Anton M. Scovold—A sister re- ‘sxdmg in Norway, seeks news of 'her brother, His age is 44, blond |hair, blue eyes, and he was last heard from in 1923. He is supposed to be in Juneau. | Andrew Nylen—Born in Boda Faul, Sweden, in 1883, and was last heard from in 1911, from Sew- tard, Alaska. His brothers and sis- |ters in Sweden are anxious to lo- cate him. Important news awaits him. Attractions At Theatres “RED HOT RHYTHM" IS AT COLISEUM TONIGHT —_—> > —— took 16 months to make a It ° | {large relief map of Pennsylvania, A Broadway-bright baby hooked fob- a sucker! And after he had [used by the Department of High- amassed a fair fortune from lead- [ways. ing “rubes” to the cleaners him- | A R U self. Miss Caroline ToGd announces that she will be ready to recelve pupils on Monday, July 21st. While in the East, Miss Todd studied under Arthur Foote and F. Addison Porter, besides observ- ling work under various teachers. very wiseness was his weakness. However, her work under Mr. Por- Josephine Dunn plays the part of | tex; wito compiled the New England { an angle-faced “Moll” who gives the | Conservatorry” Normal Course, has bunko song publisher his trimming. \li‘l‘j‘;"‘fgn":e:;og‘s"“ofa :‘}f::“ fi::‘él Kathryn Crawford is cast as al along . with other modern 2 G ischool, ‘mghb flub entertainer, hm‘cl-bmlec{‘mCfls of'relazed weights which is but neither a fool nor a two-timer. so widely: permeating piano tech- Others rounding out the list Of njo ‘an uf which will be presented | notables who figure in this pic- ¢ hep pupils. ! ture with a real savor of the Great| rics Todd Is also prepared to White Way, are Walter O'Keefe, yake pupils in Dramatic Expressi Ilka Chase, Anita Garvin and other (through which faulty speech, in- { notable screen artists. “Red HOU correct pronunciation and accent Rhythm,” which comes to the can be corrected as well as giving Coliseum tonight, was directed by the $tudent a keen enjoyment and Leo Maloney, who also wrote the understanding of great masterpieces story in collaboration with William in literature. ! Conselman, supervisor of the pro-| Her studio is temporarily located duction. Earl Baldwin and Walter at the Channel Apartments. Call De Leon contribute some of the 436. —adv, Drama and comedy link hands i"l this saga of a wise guy taken for a falt, as told in “Red Hot Rhythm,” a Pathe talking picture in which Alan Hale plays the part of the Broadway song racketeer, whose THIS MAY HAPPEN TO YOU— TOMORROW! Bumpers may protect your car against minor dents, BUT PROPER INSURANCE can PREVENT ALL your LOSSES If you can’t afford a loss, DON’T GAMBLE—INSURE! ALLEN SHATTUCK, Inc. INSURANCE - . |outbursts or ; |Gloria seemed destined for obliv- 1 = | Tealkies Prove More Remuneralive To Actors Than Siage Dram._: ilver Screen Brings Fame and Fortune to Legitimate Stars While It Relegates Many Film Favorites to Semi-Oblivion. Q= . DR Al JoTsod CrapyE On JoiN GNATRT Crara Bow " JoHN BARRYMOURE., HOLLYWOOD, Cal. — Though | (o ity ‘ ars : ths - coming - Ge (e’ llias Sewepbiior., 0 (ERIY. UIUSSOR (it MRS. HARDING UNDER | off the crowns of scores of haughty | B OPERATION IN OHIO; movie stars, acting for the silver 4 PROGRESSES NICELY screen remains the most fabulous- Gish it on the siage atl perhaps eight hundred or a thou- runken salal New Stars Arise But how many others have risen thousand per week. Today they are paid by the picture. | that the director, when h figure with Wesley Ruggles, | WOMAN'S MISSIONARY comedy work | SOCIETY WILL MEE incidentally has refused to talk in this new picture. It will be inter- esting to see how it will fa in a baseball picture hoisted hin) — There is Al Jolson for instance |into stardom. Today his contract| The Woman's Missionary Society who leaped from the stage of the has been purchased by a leadivg|of the Presbyterian Church, will company and he is now being paid jamect tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 thousands of dollars each week forjo'clock in the church parlors. Mrs. his work. Frank Harris will have charge of Buddy Rogers, a youthful jazz-ifhe program in which Mrs. David and player, bounced into stardom!Waggoner and Mrs. H. L. Redling- ong with Charles Farrell, the in-fghafer will participate. A social cifable Janet Gaynor and the he-lhour will follow with Mrs. M. L. |man Chester Morris. Merritt as hostess. All women in- He-men for some years now havelgerested in missions are invited. been quite the thing in stars by the R R A Winter Garden in New York to be- come one of the biggest box-office “draws” in the history of filmdom In “The Jazz Singer,” whic Jolson made for a company per lously close to bankruptey, the fa- mous “mammy” singer not only put the tottering corporation in the front rank of producing or- ganizations, but sounded the death- 3 this year. Focketed more than & million dol- John Gilbert, who has not fared s oo lars on this gamble, but today, Well in the “speakies,” draws al- after several less successful efforts, most 2s much. Gilbert, lu has gone over to another company junder a long term contract where he will produce on his own. Clara Bow. Miss Bow's vogue, lik Jolson has always been knowa Dis, seems to be passing. as one of the shrewdest busineis —Barrymore’s wife, Dolores Coss, men in the show game. As a mu- tello, is almost as valuable an at sical comedy. star he was one of traction as her celebrated hubby. lthe few stage players to demand Bebe Daniels, cast aside by and receive a percentage of every company, has come back with a dollar that came into the box of-|deafening bang as a talkie ace for ia rival outfit. | William 8. Graupher, of the Uni- “{versity of Pennsylvania, this season {batted better than .500 in E: Intercollegiate league. & @ George Kelly's release marks the big league fade-out of the third famous 1922 infield. The Detroit Tigers this secason o E Adolphe Menjoy, who was ban-|have been going strong for former Mary Retains Her Throne liched from Hollywood some timg|college players. Among the women, Mary Pick- ago for fostering a strike among ford, who makes her own PIClUCS the actors Has apologized, and is| Babe Ruth and rick Owens, the for distribution by United Artists,|now making films in several lun-|umpire who recently chased him still maintains her throne despie jguages for his old company. e e Nasonaihis to chall the threats of rival young satellites:l Al jn all, it is a haphaz i e e ey Mary is an artist, whose genius|crazy game, but who wouldn't ; neither «the arrival of the talkies|a chance at movie acting for $100 D5 {15 Pasitnig of years sesris [CHH00, per: plotie, b, ‘yes; G brought the Atlanta Crackers of the s i M. Cehan recently tore up a mil:|Southern Association $18500, the Her's, seemingly, is the gift of [}jon-dollar movie contract, but he|mest the Crax have received for a cternal youth which Ponc de Leoalis a millionaire, By otnervisal e sought centuries ago in the wi{r}s‘he would Have been -making ] Mg of Florida’s Everglades. Stars Tis 'gestures and noises before the cam-| William Watson Clark, left hand- and fall but Mary Pickford rctalnslem long ago. & i wslenn clark, oty 1igs her eminent position lhroggh all R g ! B,nd o Bobisn L DR 1-0, while pitching for Mississippi movie business is subject. IN GERMAN RAIL TRAFF(C unl’versn g Gloria Swanson, that svelte, so- v. phisticated ruler over the hear's of movie mad millions, is today a| bigger box-office attraction thaa| she has ever been. Four or five] times because of temperamental badly-made pictures, Mule Haas of the Athleties| BERLIN, July 24—German ruil- ways carried 1,980,000,000 passcr 5 in 1929, or 29,000,000 fewer th: n 1928. More than half of these pa jgers traveled at reduced rates Only three in’every 10,000 pa 4 Fred Marberry of the Washing- ton Senators is finding that taking a regular turn in the box is easier | on his arm than relief work was in “Ipast years. .- — Try the Five oClock Dinner/ jon but each time she has come iy Pald of all professibns, :u‘u.d”.x '\\'(V‘vk, ll‘l’e‘.‘ralmadge rzi}\:l 1 The main difference under the DAS epparently retired, Neeri Ras| ;. juoin w, Harding, wife of| new regime is the method of pay- d almost entirely, TOM|ypojera) gudge Harding of th ment. Until the close of the silent gone into cirous &Rl " yergent an, operation for era in filmdom, luminal wers | eville, ‘wurk‘ "“d_ y'?“".m",lg?t | appendicitis at Columbus, Ohio, un& signed up by the year at so mauy ¢ pictures in Germany 8t a5, 14 “aocording to word received Miss Ann Gaynor, sister of Ml':‘.. Harding. She stood the um-r.mun| Charlie Chaplin, who produces, | Overnight to take their places! Ann | od Shixpe, SR8 Drogromsing | writes, directs and stars in his owh |Harding 18 & leading” favorite fye- | Satisfactarily, isald a ietter received pictures still makes more money |Cruited from the New York,stage by Miss Gaynor. per film than any other celebrity Jack Oakie, the former chorus-boy I‘N Hardings left here several! of the film colony. However, the|is a comedian who has proved ajWeeks ago for an auto trip east to genius of the baggy pants and|powerful new magnet to picture ".m relatives and friends in Ohio, Ithe heartbreaking pathetic smile and to cover Washington and other makes so few pictures that his until very recently was|castern cities. They are expected gross income is exceeded by sev-|F ng star parts for $200 week. | Lo return late in August. eral more prolific players. Charlie |He has signed for a long period at| - - - silent pictures. way. Witness Vie McLaglen and|®——= A e e e hla. eooch-making | George Bancroft, who draw salar- | REDrE P | talkie was filmed, Jolson is said to ics that dwarf the stipends of i # |have paid the players out of his presidents and the incomes of|" yohnny Adams, 20 year old re- own pocket in exchange for stock kings. icrun pitcher with the New York in the company which skyrocketed | John Barrymore, that sterlinZigiants has a contract that pro- as soon as “The Jazz Singer” was actor, is said to be paid $350.0%1giqe5 he must not be farmed out exhibited. Jolson is said to have|for every picture he makes, and ; 3 member of the New York Giants "4 | i GAMES WEDNESDAY l s |Oakland San Francisco 1. .Day 2 5 o 4 game. | § QUALITY and SERVICE {Hollywood 17; Seattle 5. Nigh*| ] A e | Lumber Mills, I {Los Angeles 9; Sacramento 3. Night | { June(lll, umoer l S, nc. N - | Mission 6; Portland 2. ‘,E PHONE 358 . AT L . ] | National League S v {Broolign €785 Loulk 1.« -Adolgh t—r—rmrraresaetoeoele e et CER R R ! Luque pitched Brooklyn to 4| | ::1‘““1 ]1(71 e standing, defeat- THE NEW AND LATE STYLES OF New York 8; Chicago 6. Wildness | A £L R | of Bluke, Osborne and Nelson SHOES—— ALWAYS | cost the Cubs the game. [Boston 7, 6; Cincinnati 8, 5 { Pittshurgh 2, 16; Philadelphia 1, 15 1 American League {Chicago 5; Boston 3. | Fhiladelphia 4; Detroit 1. | Quinn allowed the Tigers fiv hits and his mates made nine. Cleveland 10; New York 6. 7ashington 10; St. Louis 9. Juncau City League 12; Legion 7. Moose STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League L PHONE 478 back — a bigger star and bczter}gi’“ rode first class. Speelals_at' Mabry’s. —adv AHITRINnE ac:;let:.]:: tec:l:;(‘s:uous Erich von%RELIEF mOM CURSE = n OF CONSTIPATION ‘ Stroheim’s direction, Gloria a year | A Battle Creex pnysician s or so ago made “Queen Kelly,” | “Constipation is . responsibl which cost $1,800,000 and was ney- er exhibited. It was started as 2| silent picture but the talkies swepl in and the whole film had to be taken over again. Finished it was such a terrible lies has been discovered. hodge-podge of nothing that thellet attracts water from the s owner scrapped it. But Gloria, un-‘mw the ldzy, dry, evaculating b haunted, turned around and mad: el called the colon. The w a talkie called “The Trespasser.” loosens the dry food waste 1 which was an immediate sensatior, causes a gentle, thorough, natu ! grossing millions at box-offices all |movement without forming a h: over the world. or ever increasing the dose. But others of the older stars ar2| Stop suffering from constipat not so fortunate. What has be-|Chew a Rexall Orderlie at n ccme of Dorothy Gish, Constance|Next day bright. Get 24 ror ° Talmadge, Pola Negri, Tom Mix, today at the nearest Rexall D' ], Emil Jennings and a dozen othe:s|Store. < whose incomes uesd to run lrgm Butler-Mauro Drug Co. Py more misery than any other c i But immediately relief has beon found. A tablet called Rexall Ordc - | This tab-} |l | | | | FOR INFOR Jack CALIFORNIA GROCERY LT O T U AU O LT U T W here Sound Sounds Best COLISEUM TONIGHT- 7:30—9:30 MUSICAL COMEDY SUCCESS..=-: with AlanHale PATHE % PICTURE et R e ARNOLD’S BOOTERY GOLDSTEIN’S BUILDING \ ) ) ) { é —at— L Won Lost Pet Mission 6 3 667 Hollywood { gD | Oakland 5 4 |Los Angeles 5 4 Sacramento 4 5 Portland 4 5 iSan Francisco 4 5 | Seattle ... e National League ! Won Lost Frogglyn ... 52 36 Chicago . . 53 39 New York .. 48 42 St. Lowis ... 45 43 Pittsburgh . 43 46 Boston a4 The wise woman no longer dreads “Blue Cincinnati 4a 41 Monday.” No more back-breaking hours, | Philadelphia . 3 54 roughened hands, hot kitchens— for the American League modern housewife sends her laundry out, Won Lost P{uladclpm:z : 63 We wash each family’s laundry by gently Washington ab sousing in pure soap and soft water, then :ffe‘:e;‘:‘;k :" after several rinsings it is starched, hand- gttt o ironed and promptly returned to you. Chicago ... . 86 [ St. Louis 36 57 PHONE 15 Boston ... ... 34 58 Juncau City League ALASKA LAUNDRY Won Lost . MooHo o § 1800 CLEANING and PRESSING American Legion f .300 LT T The Home of Better Groceries Ninth Annual Southeastern Alaska Fair - Juneau, Alaska September 3, 4, 5 and 6th ATION REGARDING EXHIBITS WRITE R. B. MARTIN, MANAGER OR W. S. PULLEN, SECRETARY