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i R - A AP B Ot P e P s P P 0 A P e I P e Pt A P Pt — A ane A A s A A~ e (PP AR S YN - ST i A D Sy e Three song hits. Damita. by Bobby Burns. RUDY VALLEE AND HIS EASTER SUNDAY 2 - Shows - 2 7:30 and 9;30 THE “What Price Glory” OF THE TALKIES 7 Orchestras—3 Song Hits Two U. S. Navy bands, one from Mare Island, Vallejo, Calif., the other from Marine Base, San Diego, Calif. Russian Balalaikai orchestra of twelve soloists. Famed Mexican Marimba Band of Agua Caliente; aleo Jose Arias Spanish String Band Serenaders. “Hottest” California jazz orchestra, in Coney dance 4 sequence, and U. S. Naval Barracks orchestra. “SO LONG,” marching song of U. S. Marines; sung by 600 lusty “Leathernecks.” “ELENITA,” delightfully sung by exquisite Lily _: “SO DEAR TO ME,” theme song beautifully rendered . § Connecticut Y ankees A VITAPHONE ACT “CONQUEST” 4 Yours for a Load of Laughs FLAGG QUIRT HOBBLE SKIRTS IN NEAR FUTURE? PARIS EYES By DIANA MERWIN (A. P. Fashion Editor) PARIS, April 19. — There are whispers, faint and elusive, that hobble skirts are a possibility of the near future at some style houses. With 20 houses capable of launch- ing a style upheaval turning out be- tween them more than 15,000 seri- ous efforts a year, you can find almost anything you look for in couturiers’ salons. ' It's when ideas begin to overlap and become tendencies, either at‘n TREND AND WORRIES one powerful dress house or several dress houses, that the professional stylists sit up and write cables about it One of the trends the stylists are watching very suspiciously just now is the tendency of evening dresses to have many tiers, gradu- ating toward the feet. When the tiers diminished to- ward the waist nobody wrote much about it. But since peplums accustomed the eye to a certain softness and full- ess around the hips, hemlines have AR pegun to shrink. ‘Tulle tiered skirts have gone frankly tight at the an- kles in a few isolated cases. They recall the pre-war pagoda dresses which led to hobbles, which led to slit skirts from which short skirts eventually evolved. Without doubt, having led wo- man to long evening skirts by way of picture frocks with ultra full skirts Paris is now working to sup- press some of the fullness. Use of soft materials which fall into long slender lines is leading toward long slender lines without fullness, many a style expert thinks. The slit skirt is already resorted to n the long tight foundations over which voluminous filmy chiffon 22 AR AT R &AL THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, A NO ADVANCE IN PRICES LISEU IT°’S WHERE SOUND SOUNDS BEST SINGING 1AUGHING re Telling the Cock Eyed World Gur New Picture Makes *“*What Price Glory™ as Tame as a Bedtime Story 20 see .a”d ’l()ll ) Sltua" on. whay Y he can And of Ill(lny a I”")’IV / rom bre, aler < E . et oy /Il'.s' ranl, F’]ag' TYthing ven, ——COMING—— “WORD AND MUSIC FOLLIES—1930” ‘\;md tulle ‘are, draped. Pessimists tell us it is only a | matter of time until the drapery is removed and the long, tight skirt is reinstated. PRSI G4 I, ELECTRICITY OFF NOTICE Electricity will be off on LOW- |ER FRONT Sireet from I Goid- | stein’s store to A. J. Mill begin- DAY, APRIL 20TH. & POWER CO. ———— NOTICE Wrecker Rox is employed at adv, | ning at 7 a. m. until 12 noon SUN- | ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT | Huge Ancient Monster Carried Brains in Tail WASHINGTON, April 19.~Diplo- docos, probably one of the biggest animals that ever lived, had its brains in its tail. Reconstruction by the National Museum of a skeleton of one of the glants, revealed that anatomical feature. The creature, a form of lizard, did not have much brain power, however, despite its great bulk. It has taken six years for- threé men to put the skeleton together. Judge Harding’s residence. Tele-|" The bones were found at Dino- phone 327, —ady. | saur Natlonal Monument, Utah, by B i ST T PV M Y W e AL P o e Ve 1 s pRIL 781930 " “unti] AR RN R N ) AL AR IO A A A A EASTER SUNDAY 2 = Shows ~ 2 7:30 and 9:30 OUR ALL-TALKING—SINGING— DANCING FEATURES WITH “COCK EYED WORLD” ARE——— RUDY VALLEE AND HIS Connecticut Y ankees A VITAPHONE ACT FOX MOVIETONE NEWS SEE AND HEAR THE WORLD IN ACTION L L T T e e e e e T e T T R e T T O R L U T T OO UL UL O T LT T T TR T T T —LAST TIMES TONIGHT— = MONTE BLUE in ——COMING———— “Broadway Gold Diggers” : “Say It With Songs” a Smithsonian party. Thé@nimgl is believed to have wallowed mil- lions of years ago in a semi-tropi~ cal swamp now covered by the mountains of northeastern Utah, It was 80 feet long and weighed 15 tons. e s e g LATEST PORTABLE PHONOGRAPHS 1930 models, $20.00. Expert piano tuning and phonograph repairing. Anderson Music Shoppe. —adv. R M A CARL ZEISS CAMERAS AT ALASKA SCENIC VIEWS adv Dpnane o 0 o d Dell E. Bnermi, caueauws planc uner. Hotel Gastineau. —aav J1700 mile journey, thousands of Scientiit! Refurns Wil Asiatic Game Collection i CHICAGO, April 19. — Herbert Stevens, tea planter-scientist, has returned to e Field Museum with a collectic f thousands of rare specimens of bird and animal life collected in a year’s trek through some of the 1ensc-k.nown parts of Asia. Mr. 8tevens started out with the Roosevelt expedition a year ago, but branched away from it into the Chinese provinces of Yunnan and Szchunan, and along the Thibetan border. He found, on a chom for the md but ut famine, b Mr. Stevens was formerly. and has tea plantations ai gong and Travencore. et LUDWIG NELSON'S Annual Sale will be held the past, May 1st. ——————— For an absence of about days, Karl Theile left for ¥ gell on jthe Admiral Rogers, —_—‘——— LET L we u‘?&"h. Phone #5x1 5 AR AAAAR R ARAARAAD A LA R SR UAANAARANAR BRI RN AR AR nected with the British mus PR, et S —————