The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 14, 1930, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, APRIL 14, 1930. GOLF STAR AND HIS FIANCEE years in the towering wilderness of [ JF/7, 7 cl.porr the Sierras, takes a holiday in the Whiskey Cache Found sleepy Mexican town of Taos. There Ine Street Culvert he meets the fascinating little spit- fire, Lupe, who wins his heart with |Cl0s€ to Ball Grounds her lovely singing and marvelous TN dancing. They are married, but not until Wolheim has loomed as| a desperate rival for her favor. 2! After the wedding Gary gets the * | old longing for the mountains and leaves - his young bride for the 3 ; = |mountain country. After that ‘there Do you want to see a truly mag- | are numerous thrills as he relents nificent picture with a powerful |and tries to make -his way back to story, interesting people and superb | her, through the perils of the wiki- settings? |erness, and the roving bands of hos- Do you want to forget the hum- tile Indians. The ending is a |drum “now” and spend an hour or)happy one. F |two in the romantic “then” of Lhel AT g TN Rich in Entertainment Value seventeenth century France, when as an Old Tapestry | kings and cardinals moved through | stately palaces, and an iron masked WHERE SOUND SOUNDS" BEST* COLISEUM s Tucsday MORTON DOWNEY Of “MOTHER’S BOY” fame in “LUCKY IN LOVE” All Singing All Talking Attractions At Theatres “THE IRON MASK” IS AT PALACE TONIGHT Starting PALACE _ Tonight; Tuesday A cache of some 50 gallons of moonshine whiskey was found Saturday afternoon in a street culvert in the Casey- Shattuck addition Saturday afternoon and was reported to the United States Attor- ney's office which took pos- session and destroyed the entire lot. Ownership was shrouded in mystery which could not be penetrated by Federal officers The whiskey was found by 2 group of children playing in the neighborhood. They infotmed nearby residents who in 1 telephoned U. 8. 'l_‘unight [ ! Sound News Movietone Act EAST TIMES TONIGHT Hear Lupe Velez and Gary Cooper Sing | captive paced the stone floor of an DOUGLAS | > TRE FURTHER ADVENTURES THE THREE MUSKETEERS Our Programs — Always Good—This Week—Next' Week—FEvery Week 10-2: 0-Loges 75¢ Watch For— “Hollywood Revue” “The Bridge of San Luis Rey” Prassss hne st st st f n [ >, | KANN’S STORE | THE -RIGHT GOODS | AT THE RIGHT TIME | AT THE RIGHT PRICE | i |island fortress? { | Do you want to see D'Artagnan,i brought to vivid life by Douglas NEWS | Fairbanks, riding with his three| |loyal musketeers, Athos, Porthos| and Aramis, upon their quest for 9 - S NEW romance and adventure? Y A TLEERC 13 BB W ' o Then you must see “The Iron ERSSIENT D. L. Wil tare, which opemed last; night 3tlopin) whs (Held st the home jof Mrs. Charles Fox, new officers were elected for the ensuing year as follows: President, Mrs. W. A. the Palace Theatre. You will find everything you want Fleek; Vice-President, Mrs. Fox; Secretary, Mrs. Glen Kirkham, and i | | | in this story of Dumas’ immortal | guardsmen, comedy, and tragedy, love and hate, war and the in- trigues of peace. You will thrill with}=r" """ e the daring D'Artagnan, laugh with | Treasurer, Mrs. Ed Bach. the boisterous Porthos, sigh with the| A new Executive Board was chos- | amorous Aramis and the scholarly en, with ‘Mm(‘ldmes J. O. Kirkham | Athos, and perhaps shed a tear or Elsie WZ:del and PF. A. J. Gallwas two as the story unfolds. as »mr\muer.«v The Club voted to | The story ends on the same s(xx‘-f?“xc}l“”c B Agthe or e oy jpe ! ring note with which it begins. You| C2ns” and “Canetts” in their | will never forget that final mo-|!VOr¥-carving work, . ment when, with swords raised in Following the business meeting, | their stirring salute, “One for all,|30 interesting program featuring lall for one, the four friends go nf.urntmnal to_pms,‘ was rendered. | together in search of the further| D¢ mext meeting is to be held at adventures which lie beyond. the home of Mrs. Waldal. P N e R S A R A : ~THE WOLF SONG" i AUXILIARY MEETING NOW AT COLISEUM he Ladies’ Auxiliary to Doug- las Aerie, F. O. E,, meets tonight at 8 o'clock for their first meeting of the month. All members are asked o attend. R Harvey Fergusson's novel, “Wolt Song,” a romantic tale of pioneer-| ing days in the frontier of the old; Southwest in the 1840's proved to| 1 be thrilling fare for the audienc ! which saw its moving picture v sion at the Coliseum Theatre last night when it opened for a two days’ run. Paramount has made a moving, | colorful, drama-filled thriller ro- mance from the material of the novel and the thre¢ leading stars, Lupe Velez, Gary Cooper and Louis{ ATTENTION MASONS ‘Wolheim, perform splendidly in} | Iputting over the parts of a daugh-| A gtated communication of Mt.| ter of the Mexican Dons, a young juneau Lodge No. 147, F. & A.| Kentucky adventurer-trapper and n, will be held in the Masonic his pugnacious mountaineer com- Temple Monday evening at 7:30 panion. lo'clock. Visiting Brethern cordially Gary comes to the mountain re- invited. By order of the W. M. gion of the old Southwest with CHAS. E. NAGHEL, other trappers and after two hard Secretary. | | LANGES TAKE COTTAGE HERE| ™Mr. and Mrs. Emil Lange have moved into the Shudshift cottage at the top of E street, and will {make this their home for the sum- mer. | —adv. 0000 0ee00000000 0000000000000 Distric orney H. D. Stab- ler. While rumors were current that the cache had been highje from some un- stated unner. officials were unable to confirm this. No arresis nad been made today. = -ee — — About all that can be sald this spring’s major league baseball holdouts is that they have bebh'a bit more persistent and more jtalk- ative before coming into the fold. They are still a few recalcitrants, hardy veterans such as Burleigh Grimes, but the hold-out ballyhoo | ended, for all spectacular purposes, when Babe Ruth signed for $80,000 and Art Shires for $7,500. It'is'a strange circumstance that the Babe with no special powers of eloquence at his command, gained a raisé of $10,000 a year for two years while Shires, despite his full-throated roars from Texas, will be paid less than a third of the sum at which he valued his diamond services. Yet it may not he so strange at all{ Ruth has something that cannot ‘be purchased, or even developed, for twice or three times the sum thel Shires has ion of Yankees will pay him. vet to demonstrate the posses any indispensable qualities he has been requested to dispedse [with a number of his habits. Speaking of Shires and his fistic SUCH POP © 0000000000000 00000000000000 for | a in faet | !| Whiteside, Denny Shute, tie Marle Potts of nounced. popular Columbus, Ohlo, golf professional, and Het Columbus, whose engagement was recently an- “WOLF SONG” Don’t forget “COCK EYED WORLDT.’ Soon Associated Press Photo tendencies, as ball-players do, I have it on the word of witnesses that there were at least two mem- bers of the White Sox—both out- fielders—who were given a wide berth by the Great One last sea- son whenever he felt puglistically inclined. This seems to dispose of the idea that Art, merely because he licked the manager, is or was cago club. One thing can be said on behalf of Willie Stribling. He or rather “Pa” Stribling, will agree to most ything, aceept most any offer, 5o long as the Stribling name is men- tioned. Which may account for the fact that Willie, in the past few weeks, has been listed as accepting a proffered match with Sharkey in Savannah, Ga., & bout with Phil Scott in London, and a trick con- ttest with Strangler Lewis, the wrestler, in Kansas City. At that, if the other fellows agreed to the business, Willie might hop in his airplane and make connections. And in case you haven't heard about it: Jim Thorpe is working with a paint crew for a California oil company at $75 a month. Which at least keeps the famous redskin outdoors by contrast with his last for golf writers at Del Monte. Frank Moran, who fought Jack Johnson, and Jess Willard in his heavyweight fighting days, is an {inspector. for the Southern Califor- nia Boxing Commission. Harvard’s new crew ‘mer Syracuse Oars- coach and for ULAR ITY MUST the No. 1 fighting man of the Chi-| job as guardian of the refreshments | Charles |* man, is discovered by George Var- nell to have attended the Uni-: versity of Washington’s summer school in 1926 without so much as| lifting an oar. Nevertheless Har- | vard is buying its racing shells! from Gec Pocock, the famous ‘Washington craftsman, . LODE CLAIM LOCATION NOTICES Both American and Canadian forms at The Empire. An Extraordinary SHOWING OF NEW SPRING HATS $3.95 The selection has beén espec- fally planned for the Woman to $14.50 PHONE YOUR ORDERS TO US We wik attend to them promptly. Our coal, hay, grain and transfer business is increasing daily. There’s a reason. Give us a trial order today and learn why. well a8 her expénditures. All the Beason’s Newest Offs the-Face and Brim. Models . in Ultra-Smart liones w You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER it PHONE 114 i ... in a cigarette its SMOKERS come to Chesterfield by, many roads—somé by chance, and some by choicé. 1tish’t by chance, though, that once arrived, so many of them stick to Chesterfields. Cleatly they find exactly what they want in its mild hati- ral flavor, its delicaté ¢hardcter, and'its rich tobacco fragrance: And why rlot, when good taste is the single goal of every step of Chester- field’s making — “TASTE above everything "

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