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» (& with the excellent synchronization, the music of the piano and the | dainty steps are plainly heard. The two songs which she sings in {the picture are alone worth the price of admission. They are Victor Schertzinger compositions, “Anoth- er Kiss,” and Gotta Be Good.” They are lively, snappy ballads with all the pulling power of the Carroll personality and the Schertzinger | wisdom behind them “Another Kiss” is the theme song of the picture and a fine or- | chestration is presented using this {melody as the central motif, PALACE i TONIGHT \PHOTOPHONE ¢ Talking Reporter Sound Cartoon { IRISH FANTASY Movietone Novelty 'JOHN BARRYMORE "“ETERNAL LOVE” | e — Y JOHN BARRYMORE | | NOW AT PALACE o { John Barrymore's Iong»awz\itc:i United Artists triumph, his first under Ernst Lubitsch's direction, got ‘ofl to an auspicious start at the | Palace theatre last night, when the | big picture opened. { Rich is romance, stark drama,| jhumor and spectacle, “Eternal Love” easily ranks among the finest pic-| itures ever made. The story is laid in Switzerland, high in the Alps, among the tower- {ing peaks where the characters con- i;tantly battle the forces of nature iand their own primitive passions. Barrymore, the village n'er-do-well, tloves a spiritual type girl who be- ‘comes the wife of another man. The mountain code forces him into ~a loveless marriage with a girl who in America would be classified as a gold-digger. His heart still belongs to his first sweetheart, whose jeal- ous mate plots against the life of |the man he believes is breaking ‘up his home. ! Screen story traditions are shat- tered in the way Lubitsch buil up the daring story to an unexpect- jed ending after the mountaineer has left his own wife, slain the . Heroes | husband of his sweetheart in a| —!duel and escaped with her into | | the wilderness, —Soon—- “Tanned | Legs” —Wateh For -- . “Hell’s { o S e ° “HELL'S HEROES” SOON AT PALACE Attractions . One of the most unusual and dis- {Amazing things have come to be| received with a shrug in this en-{men when they find themselves lightened. age but the amazing en- iwith a new-born baby on their s tertainment will be offered at the jhands in the midst of the desert. Qoliseum tonight. Acting ability of the highest or- \“Manhattan Cocktail” Para-|der features the production. Charles mount’s new sound picture, opens|Bickford, Raymond Hatton and| for a short run, and the snappy Fred Kohler give amazing charac- story, the gripping melodrama, the|terizations. Fritzi Ridgeway and| appealing personalities of Nancy|Maria Alba supply the feminine in-| rroll and Richard Arlen, co-fea-|terest in the notable cast, which | tured, and the marvelous soundalso includes Joe de la Cruz, Buck‘ three western bad el reactions of M WORLD WAR VE | —Preference of work for ex men has been restored by. the Goy- Marion Talley, star and (seated), is drought spoiled her corn crop. She may return ‘to the opera former opera s farmerette REGAIN AUS 'RALIAN CANBERRA, Australi ervic At Theatr(’s {tinctive pictures ever screened Willlernment following a great publi ' % be seen at the Palace theatre when {outery against the Labor H Ithe Universal all-talking production, |principle of giving preference .| i"l—h-ll‘s Heroes” opens an (’n',;A!C--lrmllv unionists. o7 7"® iment soon. The preference for soldiers wa i “MANHATTAN COCKTAIL” || 7. )iofure is based on Peter B.|established after the war but tt fi AT COLISEUM TONIGHT 'K,vne', famous story, “Three God-|Labor Government a; t £ ® |fathers” Its plot deals with the|ex-soldiers would receive prefc nce only if they had union ticke JOB RIGHTS re-education” Aug. 2 s, until the Ministry of Labor !“Cutey, Who Tied Your Tic réstored the old principle | ormet Diva May Come Back THREE TYPHOID in Chicago, Ill. She is on to New. York where ing for records. With her (léft) is her sister Florence. (internatioral Newsreeld $180,000 for additional “homes of in which attempt e made to turn street vagrants both men and women, into usefu ers. The “homes” afford medical care for those who need it, and most e- | cit Party’s |of the inmates do. It also instruct: to {them in trades. For time each inmate is put at hard, compulsory manual labor “Graduates” from this school of! work are sent to other Govern r- ment institutions to earn their liv ing. a 16 sentiment favored the B — | and the situation devel-| Arthur Longbrake, who burned | into a dangerous political [them up in 1910 with his song| now | a shoe store in Mechanics- | operates > o) burg, Ohio, | T0SCOW WOULD RECLAIM - — > — | ITS STREET CHARACTERS Oregon’s agricultural experiment MOSCOW, Aug. 28—The Moscow |growth of forage on pasture lands Municipal Council has appropriated |treated with phosphates and lime. | has noted an | station increased | — | synchronization combine to make|Connors and Walter James. @« master entertainment. i bemparan g, = e s 'Each succeeding picture in which RUMMAGE SALE Nancy Carroll plays reveals new and unsounded talents in this vivid | person. In “Manhattan Cocktail,” she does some splendid dramatic acting, some beautiful characteri- zation and she sings two songs in the sweet voice which thrilled au- diences who say and heard “Abie’s The ladies of Trinity Church | Guild will hold a Rummage Sale in Dr. Pigg's old office on Main Street on Saturday, August 30th. Contributions will be gratefully re- ceived. Bundles will be called for if those desirous of helping will Irish Rose.” telephone 604. —adv. ,But she does more, she dances a s > smart tap dance in a way that| Try the Five 0Clock Dinner stamps Broadway all over it. And,!Spesials at Mabry’s. —nav DO YOU VALUE WHAT YOU OWN? OF COURSE YOU DO—And you would pay dearly to re- deem it in case of loss. . Why not, then, protect it suf- ficiently in the first place with substantial insurance at a rea- sonably small cost. We represent strong, depend- able insurance companies, that ! pay losses promptly. YOU NEED OUR SERVICE! ALLEN SHATTUCK, Inc. Established 1898 i renowned Great Northern dining car meals. Low Summer Round Trip Fares East until September 30 from Vancouver and Seattle—to Chicago $90.30, to New York, $151.70. Similar low fares to other Return limit October 31, 1930. points. g_b‘é New EMPIRE Yhe Luxurious, ORIENTAL LIMITED For information or A. J. ARRIVEE, Traveling Passenger Agent GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY BLDG. MILES and hours speed swiftly by ... clean,cinder- less miles .. . interesting hours with world travelers and favorite radio programs in the observation lounge en route to Twin Cities, Chicago and East. Specially Pullman -equipped, with deep coil-spring mat- tresses, large dressing rooms. Shower baths, maid-manicur- ist, barber-valet, 4 o'clock tca, news and market reports ... BUILDER reservations write or cable SEATTLE, US.A. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1930. L T T T T TR A CASESDEVELOP, SAYS DVIGHNE Health Commissioner Finds Sanitation Bad at Klawock Village Three cases of typhoid fever have veloped at Klawock and there is chance that others will occur, | ud Dr. H. C. DeVighne, Territor- Commissioner cf Health, wio re- irned here late ye: rday from a irvey of conditions in that In- in settlement. While the source of could not be defi y the short time he spent ere, he said it was not improbable hat it came frem one of three lo- 1 water systems. Oné of the cases is being treated a Wrangell hospital, another at and the third is being cared at Klawock. Typhoid vaccine in ifficient quantities to innoculate ne time all of the residents of the llage, left with Miss Agnes etcher, Government nurse, and \dditional supplies to complete the nnoculation have been ordered for mmediate delive; ack of sewer stem, bad san ation and improperly safegu water supplies were found to Dr. DeVighne said. He spoke meeting of the village ut these defects, urging prop. precautions—boiling of water and thorough cooking of vegetables to prevent a spread of the disease. As there has been a considerable number of active contacts and un- der existing sanitation conditions, he said. it would be surprising if there were not more cases deeloped. TED HARRISON GIVEN SPOT ON VETERANS' CARD Substitutes for Nickitch Against Lowe—Reserve ‘Seat Sale Opened Ted Harrison, who fought a well- earned draw against Kid Robert e disease ig, ! in the last American Legion Smok- | er, has been substituted for Billy| Nikisch, in the first preliminary| on the Vets' Labor Day card next| Monday evening, it was announced today by Matchmaker Kenneth “Grassy” Lowe, making his| ok appearance, will be Harrison's opponent. The Legion opened its sale of re- resve tickets today. These paste- boards are on sale at Juneau Drug Company and the Alaskan Hotel A brisk advance sale is reported presaging a sold-out house by Mon- day. Local boxers appearing on the! card are getting their final training touches this week. Joe Collier, who | meets Soldier Olson in the final bout of the evening, looks to be asj| good as ever. Moore, who takes on | Soldier Northcutt in the semi-final, is showing more speed and punch- ing power tha never before. These boys will finish the heavy grindJ LT T T T ADDED LU LT T T T {Saturday and take things casy over|cago Cubs have heen a factor in|by Atlanta a year ago, apparertly iSunday and Monday, doing just|the National League race there(is headed for Several: new South- enough work to keep on edge. has been one club that jinxed them. fern association records at Nash- ——————— This year it is the Cincinnati|ville STEEL MILL X-RAYS SAME Reds. Out of 15 games, the Reds Sunny Jim, who had a fling at AS USED FOR DISEASE | won 9. first basing for Connie Mack' seys't NEW YORK, Aug. 28. — the same X-rays are used in the | laboratories of the mills and the |f factories to analyze steel and alloys | ¢ 1y | as physicians use in treating di-|the flag. Philadelphia won the 22- |and 59 behind the major league sease. game series. record of 175 held by Lou Gehrig of The Radiological Society of North S5 B the Yanks: " P, o | ANSWE WITH HOME RUNS| Oshorne White, Hawalian sugar dium and X-ray work of all scien-| tists end to the industrial X m|‘ men. The object is to enable them | to compare notes, for what one dis- IV ||I||I|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl|l|IlIllIIIlIIlIII||flIHIll"ll"lllll"llllllll_” W b COLISEUM ) Where Sound Sounds Best \ TONIGHT :30—9:30 ll||l|l|lI“IIl"|||IIllI”ul"l"l”"lllllfl"|Ill“uulllllllllll"llIlllmlllmnllllullllfll“ll FEATURES—VITAPHO Last year Pittsburgh took a ma- |eral years ago, has hit 30 homers, ority of the 22 games {rom the lonly three short of the new Dixie pennant winners and the year be- (mark he set last year for the Vols, ore the Cubs lost enough games|and has batted in 116 runs, just 27 o the lowly Phillies to cost them |short of the Southern league record Tenn., August 28. who was cut adrift planter, has taken over 8000 acras |of land in California to fatten beef cattle and raise alfalfa. NASHVILLE, —Jim Poole, covers may be useful to any or al the others. e, REDS IN TRIMMING CUBS KEEP UP 3-YEAR HISTORY CHICAGO, August 28.—Each of the past three years when the Chi- . e }) B Exhibitors are requested to have their displays in the Fair Building at least two days before oi)elning date. See These Big Features at the Fair! ALASKA NATIVE TRIBAL DANCES—BAND CONCERTS—VAUDEVILLE FEATURES—DANCING | —LOCAL MOVING PICTURES AND COMEDY FILMS EACH NIGHT—AFTERNOON RADIQ CON- CERTS. See the exhibit HOME CANNING AND SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA FAIR s of MINERALS NEEDLEWORK. FLOWE " Septembe ® PicGLy, WicaLy RS, VEGETABLES, FINE ARTS, SCHOOL WORK, r 3-4-5-6 s\