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:' BRIDES BLUSH IN CAPITOL'S | pLAY SUNDAY CAPITOL SUNDAY MATINEE—2 M. SUNDAY-MONDAY 7:30 9:30 {Joan Crawford Stars in { Drama to Be Given First Showing at Matinee u were THRILLED “Our Dancing| Daughters” . “Our| Modern Maidens” was SENSATION . . . “Our] shing Brides® Ts STUPENDOUS! Three plots in one fl| Crawford’s starring vehicle, “Our | Blushing Brides,” which will show | Mcnday, beginning with tomorrow afterncon’s matinee. The picture centers about three individual romances, namely, that |of Miss Crawford and Robert Mont- i e and Raymond kett and Dorothy Sebastian ard n Miljan, the threads of the | three separate romances tieing .up with one another in an ingenious manner. Supporting roles are play- ed by Hedda Hooper, Albert Conti, { Edward Brophy, Robert Emmett | O'Cennor, Martha - Sleeper, Mary ! Doran, Gwen Lee, Catherine Moy- {lan and others. | Settings Are Lavish { Information is that Metro-Gold- | wyn-Mayer went the limit in | equipping the picture with lavish B8 | scenes and unusual settings. As an M | example, instead of making de- { tment store scenes which play {an important part in the plot i within the confines of the studio America’s Dancing g Daughter— M | the entire May Company Depart- ment Store in Los Angeles where scenes were “‘shot” closing time on a Saturday night, the entire personnel of the store being used as extras. In ancther instance, a fashion- | show, filmed on outdoor palivions, in what was represented as being the sunken gerden on the Long Island estate of a millionaire re- quired the designing upon the part of Adrian, studio fashion- creator, of more than a hundred costumes ranging all the way from sports clothes and the newest dar- ing models in bathing outfits to sheerest lingerie and exquisite eve- ning models. Albertina Racch Ballet OUR BLLUSHING BIRIIDIES with Robert Montgomery Anita Page, Dorothy Sebastian Raymond Hackett And as though this was ot R enough spectacle, the produce A Harry Beaumont Prodiction tcppad it off with an Albertina Rasch ballet ch the girl dance in Greciar umes and IS LOVE on the bargain white wigs under modernistic light- ccunter—a thing of barter ing arrangements. The story by Bess Meredyth pr ants a true to life picture of t vorking girls who long for the lu» and sale? Don’t make up your mind till you see this entranc- ing story of three department ur of life and discover what store girls who travel three it costs to attain them sl L Tl o different roads to romance! It’'s gorgecus, it's stimulat- ing, it’s tremendous! ParadeIs Halted by Policemen Moo Kliliased wilh Conts | munist Party in Melee ‘ in Denver, Colo. TWISTED WRECKAGE OF ILL-FATED PLANE ——- | DENVER, Cal, April 11.—Ong¢ | man was knocked unconscious, sev- |eral persons were injured and | fourteen arrested as the Police ! halted a parade of 250 men said to be sugar beet workers, and claim- ing affiliation with the Commun- ist Party. One revolver was brought into | play during the melee but no shots | were fired. | Bruised heads and knuckles com- ‘prised most of the injuries. —_————> - 4 | The Black Hills of South Da~ | kota, where Calvin Coolidge spent | | | | a summer vacation when President, are believed to have great undis= covered deposits of gold. Solving the Problem of | Spring Frocks Plain crepes; prints in reverse colours; perky pleated ruffled frocks; - jacket suits in contrast prints and colours; blouse suits in prints, elbow sleeves with circular flounces; embroidered vest with tailored prints; floral prints. In sizes for women—and Sschiatid Piots. smaller women. Frocks smart An idea of the completeness of the destruction of the Transcontinental and Western Air Express plane in which Knute Rockne and seven others met their death in a crash in Kansas is shown Dy the above p.cture. 3 enocugh to meet the fancy of all, In sizes here to fit your figure your —and priced also to fit 1931 budget figures. | merning from Juneau for Kake, ! | Wrangell and Ketchikan. The cratt scheduled to return here either this - afternoon or tomorrow. i J NE engers who flew south were | $8.‘)5 Ivor J. Anderson of Spokane, road ) ” contractor, for Kake; A. Sorset, FIvE Tu SUUTH!busme:s man, for Wrangell;| to Charls Gill and R. C. Brooks, business men, and C. R. Wright, | Cisculars —— road contractar, for Ketchikan. /" Invitations $16. 75 In -returning from Ketchikan, L 3 : f etterheads Petersburz Is Scheduled to|the plane wil call at Kake to i e S | bring M. Anderson back here. Folders ¢ Cards Return Here Tomght Statements ——r———— or Tomorrow Envelopes Julius H. Barnes, chairman of Carrying five passengers, the|the National Business Survey con- Alaske-Washington Airways sea- | ference named by President Hoo- plane Petersburg, Pilot Robert El- | ver, has been named the out- Jis and Mechanic F. J. Wadman, | standing citizen of Duluth, Minn. took off soon after 9 o'clock thislfor 1930. ¢ Billheads "GET OUR PRICES ||| is the un-| {usual feature connected with Joan|t {ac the Calitol Theatre Sunday and hous | at Culver City, the company hired | directly after' SARGASSO SEA DRAMA COMES TO COLISEUM |'Isle of Lost Ships’ Sunday | | Wil Follow ‘Tiger | Rose’ Tonight With the “Tiger Rose” showing tht only at the Coliseum, of Ships” will be | seaweed; dead, floating shi marine scenes above and below the rface; shipwreck of a big liner.} nd drama on the mysterious Sar-| sso Sea—that’s the real problem | {for the film sound experts. In fact, it is the greatest to date, according to Irving Willat, wh filmed the “Isle of Lost Ships” Army of Technicians That you might hear as well as |see this big special produced by | | First. National Pictures, Willat and a veritable army of technicians| {worked for months on sea and land, on sound problems alone. The scenic background presented a tremendous technical problem in itself, but was insignificant in comparison to the complexities of| seund. | Imagine a crowded liner plough- ing through a rough the | | cellision with a derelict; ! and screams and orders shouted :(hruuuh megaphones; the mad rush, |of passengers on the decks! Huge Liner Deserted Imagine the sounds, as well as| shs, on & huge, crippled, drifting | {liner, deserted by .all but three | persons. i | hen the problem of sound in an/ |island of dead ships, the Sargasso | {Sea’s central eddy where dere-| ’Jmts of many centuries collected and were made into a floating is- | |land and ships’ graveyard by the {men—and a few women—who had | flcated in on them! Finally, escape | during a gun battle on this unique | island, via a submarine! | | A powerful aii-star cast sup-| | ported by many colorful character | | pecple appears in “The TIsle of; | Lost Ships.” Virginia Valli and Jason Robards are the lovi Rob- t O'Connor, stage s af colerful role as a detective who is returning the hero to prison and | “the chair,” and Noah Beery is the | | villain. | | “The Isie of Lost Ships” is based | |on Crittenden Marriott’s novel. Its! |locale has been used in no other| |film and in very few works of fic-| | tion. CRADUATEDTAX FOR TRAP FISH REACHES HOUSE (Continued from Page One) |t SRR ARG under a certificate of sale upon gxecution or who holds any at- tachment, execution, judgment or lien thereupon, when it is neces- sary to do the work to protect the claim. It also provides that thz person so doing the work shall have a lien upon the claim. “ Corporate security as well as personal bond covering attach- ments is provided for in a bill by Boyle to amend section 958 of the Compiled Laws. Another code amendment was proposed by him in a further bill relating to Sec- tion 878 of the Compiled Laws re- lating to how summons are served and upecn whom. Mr. Foster introduced a bill au- thorizing the Territorial Board of| Road Commissioners, in conjunc- tion with the town o! Cordova, to | construct a hydroplane port or mooring within five miles of that community, and authorizing the expenditure of $3,000 divisional road funds for that purpose. NOTICE TO PAY SCHOOL TAX NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been duly appointed School Tax Collector for Juneau, Alaska, in conformity with Chapter 29, Alaska Session Laws, | 1019, _All male persons between the ages of twenty-one and fifty years, ex- cept soldiers, sailors in U. 8. Navy or Revenue Cutter Service, volun- teer firemen, paupers and insane| persons, are subject to tax in sum| of Five ($5.00) Dollars. Should you be living in Alaska on or prior to the first Monday | lin April, 1931, said tax shall be due and payable on said first date and shall be delinquent after May {1st, 1931. Should you arrive in Alaska later than first date above mentioned, tax will be delinquent thirty (30) days after your arrival, or within ten (10) days after notice is given you. ! All persons, firms or corpora- tions, employing Jabor shall furnish list of employees to collector and are authorized by law to deduct amount of tax from wages of em- ployees. Fines and imprisonment are pro- vided by the Act above quoted for those who fail or neglect to pay tax or furnish list of employees. Dated Juneau, Alaska, April 1st, 1931, L H. R. SHEPARD, School Tax Cellector for Juneau, Alaska. A VITAPHONE PICTURE AT A VITAPHONE THEATRE — COLISEUM \ SUNDAY and MONDAY \ 7:30—9:30 G Based on novel by Crit- tenden Marriott. Di- rected by Irvin Willat. Presented by First Na- tional Pictures, Inc. with VIRGINiA VALLI, JASON ROBARDS OAH BEERY and [ SATURDAY ONLY “TIGER ROSE” Acts Cartoons rat MNational Iv’s On The Map See a floating island of derelicts— A weird empire ruled by a giant brute with the right of might and the heart Sire, And among them a law that every woman men and ships — ghost vessels of countless fleets, locked together in of a Pirate a mass of seaweed. A colony of must choose a man within a day. And the man she picks must fight the rest to hold her. castaways with gold and treasures worth a king’s ransom. ACCOUNTS NOW DUE | All accounis aue the Juneau Motors, Inc., “Service” Lucas, con- tracted cn or before February 28th, 1931, should be paid at once to H. 1. Lucas at the office of the Ju- neau Motors. Please bz pror Warning! CARE must be taken in the kind of TINTING you purchase for your walls. MURESCO Will not peel, crack or rub off. B SRR SEE THE MOTO BIKE In our window ARNOLD’S BOOTERY DS S INSIST upon MURESCO if you want the best THEREFORE, beware of the kind of COLD AND HOT WATER KALSOMIT chase. e i E you pur- —_— “Tomorrow’s Styles Toda;” MURESCO is sold at the KID ]uneau [’amt Store GLOVES Showing a complete new line of smart set gloves for the Spring Ensemble. TRAVEL BY AIR FLIGHTS TO ANY POINT DESIRED “Juneau’s Own Store” For reservations see J. B. Burford & Co., City Ticket Agents, Seward Street, Telephone 79