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i | | | GARBO STARS IRENE BORDONI AT CAPITOL | WINS TRIUMPH IN‘GHRISTIE', AT COLISEUM GRETA GARBO Talks----- The WHOLE WORLD Listens! When TONIGHT Brilliant Performance of ‘Paris’ /\.fforr]sfiopportunily O'Neill Play Is Given | for Excellent Singing by Fine Cast ‘ and Dancing Greta Garbi all-talking picture,| “I am one actress and zat ees my | adapied from the beesness.” play by Eugene O'Neill,| That is a line spoken by Irene at the Capitol Theatre last Bordoni in “Par f night and fulfilled all expectatio escribes with simple accuracy | Miss Garbo's voice is suited adm caction to this piquant little| ably to the role of the Swedish!/star, who burst forth in great| r The Garbo accent is brilliance at the Coliseum Theatre | 50 slight as to only make her sp2cch last nigl ithe e interesting. Bordo refreshingly ' different. | Anna Christie,” Garbo 'From her intriguing French accent | Miss ng barge with Qer fat |charm to the First National-Vita-| Warmth and Naturalnes iphone screan | Miss Garbo scems to have gar-| The star sings and dances in| L & i the innermost thoughts and some ver of the character she por- ! quences 1 endows her with mosily a comedy-drama. th and naturalness which does| The supporting cast, e short of bringing the ."‘I'Pf‘n;k‘r‘\'("“ll prominent stage players, spectacular theatre s althou the picture is| | including |shadow to actual life. Every ges standing. Jack Buchanan, fa- 5 it |t and ' every spoken line isimous in Dondon and New York,| ERE.is the most eagell) with a deep emotional un-'!enacts the chief supporting role. | 3 : awaited event of screen- anding. The role is undoubt-| “Peris” was directed by Clarence . ¢ e dem — Cgeta Garbo's first edly the finest Miss Garbo has ever Badger. The original play was by IN HER FIRST TALKING PICTURE talking ppture appearance. cted. 4 | Martin Brown, and the screen ver- The most fascinating figure in films wins new triumph by her acting and beauty, to which is now added a voice of “unforgettable appeal. A great star—in a great play The work of the supporting cast sion is by Hope Loring. equally proficient. ~George Mar-| Added attractions at the Coli- lion | s the father role with the seum are “The Evolution of th} same fervor and intensity with Dance,” and a news review. {which he created the original stage {role and * played the part in ANnn ives a b performance he to her twinkling toes she spells a |l i and tragic heroine of O'-{novel screen personality. She h: : 1's moving drama, who has brought “Paris,” her New York| cd and seeks a life on a stage success, with all its original| C A P b 7 3 O L TONIGHT Adapted by HAL ROACH presents (BARLEY WICKERSHAM SHOWS NATION'S DEBT TO ALASKA Northern Trade Totals Bil- lions, Appropriations | but Millions (Continuea 1rom Page One) Oraig, $20,000 at Klawak and $75,- 000 at Petersburg, a total of $540,- 000, while the Forest Service will spend $191,000 in its separate work. | The total to be expended for| construction of highways, roads and trails in 1931 amounts to $1,670,- MOST FOODS TASTE BETTER IF COOKED IN SMALL AMOUNTS Same is Trye of Hills Bros. + Coffee, Which is Never ! ¢ Roasted in Bulk | When food is cooked in small quantities, the mixing, the appli- cation of heat, can be controlled with much more exactness. An omelet, for example, made of three| eggs will turn out more tender and | fluffy than one made of many eggs. A similar situation . occurs in roasting coffee. When roasted in bulk it is impossible to control the heat exactly. Some of the batch, therefore, 1s overdone and some underdone. As a result there is a variation in flavor.’ In the invention of Controlled Roast'ng, Hills Bros. found the way 10 insure an even roast in their fine blend of coffee. Only 2 few pounds at a time are roasted by this pat- ented, continuous process. When Chrirstie A Metrq-Golduyyn-Mayer ALL TALKING ricrurs | compari CLARENCE BROWT S production with CHARLES BICKFORD, GEORGE F. MARION, MARIE DRESSLER Frances Marion from Eugene O'Neill's play, “Anna Christie.” Directed LATEST NEWS —with a great director. TONIGHT by C. Brown. [ E————————_———— —COMING— “DEVIL, MAY CARE” “RAIN OR SHINE” “FREE AND EASY” “THIRTEENTH CHAIR “BIG HOUSE” 000, b including the appropria- tions yet to be made by the Leg- islature of Alaska. and Collector of Customs, we are informed that the total production of Alaska fish, furs and minerals { exported to the United States since 1867, amounts to the sum of $1,- 762,968,496. “Not only Native Schosls Remembered “Nor are the native schools for- gotten. The Bureau of Education wiil erect this year six new school buildings in the Northern part of the Territory at a cost of $36,000; has Alaska produced and cxported that great wealth to the United States, and enriched | Pacific Coast cities thereby, but three new hosptials to cost $29,- I ex ms to 14 other school people have purchased from puildings to cost $110,000; an In-|the United States, principally from dian bo aining school at Shoe- Seattle, Portland and San Fran- maker B2 cisco, and imported into Alaska, ‘Wrangell, to cost $100,- 000, and other items totaling $1,- 125,000. Public funds to the amount | of about $5,000,000 will thus be| expended in Alaska in 1931, very | largely for public highways. | And why not? Five million| ars per annum is a goodly sum money, but & mere pittance in son with what the United States expends annually the B ’l‘l’iprz““i‘:“‘lo‘g;r'p n Stales | g13.041, total imports; or $2,67.- wealth to ‘csns‘i‘uct roads and other G349 {0 tohal teale, s .A]_' smprdedments g by taxation upun} aska’s trade value with United RS e e Yeldngl | States merchants and manufactur-| privASely Qved Propersy OngINg | ars since 1867 is more than two | to those who own both the Prob-| ;4 5 naj billion dollars! A huge| erty and the roads, and where the| sum to have been won by a few| United States owns but little. 4 A { thousa ] m an inhos- Owns 98 Per Cent | usand pioneers fro; n inho: - - P .| pitable wilderness in the first half “In. -Alasks; L'he United States' contyry of trade with the mother | owns 98‘});1' cent of all L]’?’_‘ lands, country. It is, however, but a“ m.d &1I"the raliroéts, bulldings ax}:J mere trickle to the great stream other property cqnstructcd by it of wealth' which “Tlow into the and reserves to its own use fOr'}parets of the United States from future sale all the coal, oil and, 5; Alaska when our natural resources other wealth from the public lands, | e S fatie facated wn RInCEIE, & R 45 shant o Which it will derive grm"idcve!oped by an increasing number fit. The small sum it expends; 3 1 r ' {of our people who follow us into In-Alnsks, Sigsoving 18 own pmp'[the Northern Territory, armed with i 3 muc‘h Jste than One,'ha]f;bcmcr trade facilities and aided by | of the annual gold output Alaska| ... and more generous govern- | mines send to the Government g .. \ mints for the support of the na-, H tion's gold standard. From January | o o ha |1, 1880, to December 31, 1930, a ur seas are filled Wwi sh, | ( period of 50 years, Alaskans mined , 0ur mountains with minerals, our‘ and shipped to the United Slatlzs fg:sttfl;e15;::3;gwgllllmfoxr::tkirzwa;‘; the sum of $628806,856 in gold, in¢ , our ccpc)per and other m:asralsA T?lerel interior valleys with unsettled agri- are 600 months in 50 )‘mrs.—‘Alaska\! cultural lands f‘rq‘;]al in r“gfl a(;'i'-‘“ miners produced more than $1,-|Productivity to those of Scandi- 000,000 of gold ana copper per|Davia. Our people are brave and month during that 50-year period.lha_rdy. filled with loyalty to Am- The mineral industry in Alaska |€rican ideals and love for con-| is yet in 'ils infancy and is con- stitutional government, and in good | { stantly growing. from 1867 to date, more than 900 million dollars’ worth of mer- chandise. Fabulcus Total Trade “Add Alaska's total production of wealth to her total purchase of merchandise—our total exports | to, and our total imports from,| | the United States and we have $1,762,068,496, total exports; $907.- dol Resources Are Unlimited the roasting is finished a uniformly delicious flavor has been developed such as no other coffee has. When you buy Hills Bros. Coffee it is always fresh because it is packed in vacuum. By this process, air, which destroys the flavor o coffee, is taken from the can and kept out. Ordinary cans, even if air-tight, do not keep coffee fresh. Grocers everywhere sell Hills'Bros. Coffee. Ask for it by name and look for the Arab on the can. Hills Bros. Coffee, Inc., San Francisco, California, From 1906 to 1930, both included,|Ment and trade in our chosen a period of 25 years, Alaska fisher- homeland—Alaska. men caught, prepared and shipped TR to the United States markets fish|APTENTION AMERICAN LEGION to the amount of $743975,738—an MEMBERS | annual production of $30,000,000.| Meeting tonight at Dugout at ©1931 | From the reports of the Governor|g pm, —adv. time will adopt a State Constitu-) i tion and secure the admission of Exceeded by Fish 4 “As gre::e: sumyaslsmat half- | the State of Alaska into the ('JnfonI century output of Alaska minerals|Of the United States. We hail }:3 amounts to, the value of Alaska|Completion of this beautiful Capt-| fish shipped to the United States|fol: and the promise o h\q!:.erl in half that period exceeds it. development in American Govern- UITTLE STORIES | Littlo Stars 01 1 » 2 ita Tovar The “most typical Mexican girl” as selected in a beauty contest by a Hollywood film company, found L4p her film career threatened becausg| of her accent, but Lupita Tovar re- mained to score in Spanish ver- sions. Knowing no English when she arrived, she has so perfected the adopted language that she may scon appear in English versions. Miss Tovar was born in Tehuan- tepec, Mexico, and educated in Mexico City, where the films found her. She has black eyes and black { hair. and likes to-dance and ride. ——————— SPECTACULAR RAID, SEATTLE Officers Jump Into Opium Den, Arrest Ten and Seize Narcotics SEATTLE, Feb. 16—Two Federal officers, W. D, Morris and Matthew Crouch, climbed to the roof of a two-story building and dropped 15 feet from the skylight to the floor and with drawn pistols arrested t Chinese. The two officers seized narcotics valued at than $15,000. It is said the room was guarded by three barred doors which manned by outlooks. Fifteen bunks| were in the room for opium | smokers. —_——————— Daily mmpire Want Ads Pay. | the other {the silent picture made several pler Marthy, gives a superb ch a ization far removed from her previous. comedy roles; Bickford, as Matt, Anna’s Charles lover, glves a sterling performance. i tatior effc may well be proud of S It has heen screened and with a ar- | mechanical limitations on the ex- |cellent camera work of William | . The recording is splendid ' the atmospheric s ted with fine strokes | added atiraction is “All | Teed Up,” a Hal Roach comedy ilv.l!m':m; Charles Chase. Learn about golf from Charley. | Althcugh he 't know a thing about golf he makes a hole in one; imped by a stymie he goes around llow's ball into the hole with a single putt; gets out of {a sand ap with but one stroke, plays land makes ot brilliant ® that are worthy of a professional The dazzling blonde beauty of 2 Todd may again be n in medy. She ter of a presid: 1ys the dau it of a very elite golf club. Quite smitien by Char- ley’s charms, she induces him to play golf at her club. If he makes a favorable impression with the members of the club, his applica- tion may be accepted for member- ship. Deon't fall to see the im- pression he leaves with the old Yog- ies. rs ago, Marie Dressler, as the ‘L. E. OSTERMAN, Direction Is Excellent | Clarence Brown, who directed {the talking screen version of the [play from Frances Marion’s adap- School Teacher and Cus- his minimum of ( MISS NEGOESCU, MARRIED HERE | toms Official Wedded on Thirteenth ! age of Miss Ana Nego sor The mar escu, Art and Music £l the Juneau Public Schools, | Loo E. Osterman, Deputy Collector | of Customs, temporarily located at! headquarters office here, was an-| nounced today. The ceremony was performed Friday, February 13, in| the office of Commissioner Charles | The witnesses were Mr. and | rs. Harold L. Stabler, Miss Mable | Munson of Juneau, and Mr. Joha| | . Scudder, of Wrangell. | Mrs. Osterman is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Nf":u—i' |escu, merchant of Vancouver, Wash-| |ington, and graduated last year| from the Washington State College, | at Pullman. sterman is the son of Mrs Maude M. Bennett, of Bellingham,| Washington. He entered the Cus- | toms Service at Taku Inlet on May: |1, 1930. : The bride and groom are popu- lar among the younger set and have a host of friends, made during heir residence in this city. [ Ads Pay. Mr. Daily Empire wa N T !!nmummulmmu UHTHTHHERRIRHHIH BT . s T T e T T T T T I illll!ilIIII!HIIHIIIIII TRIANGLE BUILDING i I T G 40 New Dresses Featuring the New Velvet Jacke In printed Chiffon, Georgette, Flat Crepes, Taffeta and Satin. For afternoon or ev- ening wear. TN Can be worn with or without Jackets and are really very smart either way. PRICED $12.75 $16.75 $19.50 Sizes 14 to 46 Hrrdlonis LU U T U T — LAST TIMES IT'S DIFFERENT—GORGEOUS—TECHNICOLOR Irene Bordoni in “PARIS” GOWNS—GIRLS—SINGING—DANCING EVERYTHING AND HOW! 2 SHOWS 7:30—9:30 [ v Takes any decoration! You can paper Sheetrock— paint it— panel it. Or you can apply Textone, the new decorator that gives hand- some texture finishes. And Sheetrock does not _ warp, is weather-tigat, dur- able and fireproof. Ask us about Sheetrock. Reg. U. 8. Pat. Off. SHEETROCK ‘THE Fireproof WALLBOARD JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS, Inc. Pioneer Pool Hall Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Miller, Prop. FoS—— ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Austin Fresh Tarffales Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 IS frorrrrr e Sure— It Bends But— Does Not Break Schumacher! Plaster Wall Board ent from any other wall ade. Joints can be qul icl 1‘1 sealed to give a one plece Manufactured by patented processes that glve great flexl bility, so that this superior wall board will not crack in bending to round curves. Easily “worked”, can be sawed or cut like wood. A sturdy, dependable wall board differ- wall. Lasts a lifetime. ‘Wil not chip, crack, warp orf buckle. Let us point out the many superior points of this wall’ board for Interior and exterior walle. Thomas . Hardware Co. e i 1 ki A - of JAZ PIANO “Learn the MODERN Way” PLAY REAL JAZZ PIANO IN 3 MONTHS A Personal Course Taught by Mail LEARN POPULAR MUSIC—SYNCOPATION Our Free Booklet Tells How You May Learn Directly From Sheet Music. No Knowledge of Music Neces- sary. You Play a Popular Song the Second Lesson. We GUARANTEE to Teach You to Play in 12 Weeks. WRITE for Your Copy of this FREE BOOKLET., THE HALFHILL STUDIOS OF JAZZ PIANO Tacoma, Washington PR DI - Temple of Music THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribate” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 ——— ¥ | BERad S PicoLy, WiGcGLY