The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 10, 1935, Page 3

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- “*CLAUDE RAINS WHITNEY BOURNE | A - MARGO - PARAMOUNT RELEASE Alsc NEWS STARTING TODAY CO[ISEUM THEATRE “JANE EYRE” ‘ with Virginia Colin Bruce Clive MARY BOLAND POLLY MORAN , SIDNEY FOX SIDNEY BLACKMER = RKO RADIO PICTURE MIDNIGHT PREVIEW R TG S A o, ~ UPTOWN ~ F riday HATED B) because LOVED by Yet she “SHE WAS A LADY” HELEN TWELVETREES—DONALD WOODS I'ws Wemen . . she dared to love as Two Men . . heart dared not share her A FOX Picture with RALPH MORGAN—MONROE OWSLEY ALSO—KEN MAYNARD in “FARGO EXPRESS” KIDDIES’ MATINEE Old _papers for sale at Emplre Offue 3 TURDAY— 1 P. FELT HATS In pastel shades and dark colurs Values to $3.95 Special $2.95 (JUST RECEIVED) $1.25 10 $6.95 Saturday her heart dictated! with either! VALUE SEEKE RS ! NOTE THESE ! Here’s How to Save on This Season’s Style-Right Apparel-— A T 5 B 0T R NEW SWEATERS Twins, lacy hand knit, in plain pastels or darker shades. Sport styles in zipper, slipover or buttons. JONES-STEVENS Remember the Hospital Guild Dance — May 11 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1935. ‘RELIEF QUERY TALKINGISNOT Twice Honored - STILL ISSUE 600D FOR THOSE - o ’ - FOR ILLINOIS ON OPERA STAGE Suflenng, Privation Con- Less Conversatlon Makes tinues as Legislators Better Songsters, Look for Funds Says Star CHICAGO, May 10.—Reports of | suffering and privation mounted to today, MILAN, May 10.—Toti Dal Monti, Scala Opera soprano, Wwho has achieved fame and fortune through { new high levels here but hunger marchers, under orders from |her voice, believes that most peo- their leaders, receded from the|ple use theirs too much. | “Talking is the worst enemy of jcapital at Springfield, as legislative ¢ leaders mapped plans to end the any singer,” says the operatic star. X | state’s relief problem | “People talk too much in this < @ Officials of the IERA commission | world, wasting their voices in aim- predictad that, by Saturday, all le: pointless conversation “just to cne of the state's cou ! make talk’ as they say. That is why | be without funds to carry on relief ' the average man or woman can't| Miss Sadie Jane Fletcher, above, work. |sing even ‘Sweet Adelin2’.” co-ed at the University of Mis- Governor Henry Homer hoped Dzughter Sing:, Too souri, Columbia, is so popular lthat the week-end would find| Signora Dal Monti is training her that her male classmates twice enough votes mustered so that the eight-year-old daughter, Mary de honored her by selecting the | measure increasing the sales tax Muro, to be a greater singer than| young lady as reigning campus | coutd be passed. The bill, which has|she is herself. Already, the mother peauty and queen of the univer an emergency clause, is aimed to said, the child can sing the great sity military ball. provide relief money. aria ‘*Caro Nome” and the entire soprano part of the “Barber of Se- Sadie Jane Fletcher “SHE WAS A LADY” | ville.” (BIG DOUBLE FEATURE | ‘eone seosie et SO % HEABS DOUBLE BILL | PROGRAM OPENS AT COLISEUM TONIGHT Refuting the general belief that the state of Utopia will not be| | reached until everybody is financial- | ly independent, “Down to Their Last Yacht,” musical fantasy open- on a double bill at the Coli- um Theatre tonight, shows that this blissful state is attained when ,cne becomes content with the many and lavish gifts of Nature. The story recounts the hilarious adventures of members on a yacht- young a voice,” Signora Dal Monti says. “But I am a singer and know AT UPTOWN TONIGHT just how far to go. L Slim Star For Future Helen T “At the same time, I have put her of on a special diet and strict regimen 50 that when she is grown she will remain slim and beautiful. As you| gl know, inc in size is the great-| 3. Cop est source of worry to all singers,| wWa; a La appeared serially in| male and female.” | McCall's Magazine recently and at- Mary, however, is likely to be a tracted nation-wide attention for scmewhat taciturn prima donna. lits originality. Based on the strug= | € “She is learning to conserve her|gle of a girl to surmount the han- voice. She is learning to speak only ldicap of a family skeleton and win heads the cast | featured on | ram opening tonight wn Theatre, Written by daughter of I'vm\ telling fame, 0 when she has something to say,”|the right to life and love, the film ing cruise to the South Seas. The | says her mother. |mcves against the multiple back- crew and servants are down-and-| «rf it were possible for a singer to ground of a Montana ranch, a trav- | cut bluebloods while the passengers are of the mewly-rich class, aspir- {ing to climb the social ladder. Mary use his or her voice only on theeliny cir stage, without even talking to any-land a stat cne unnecessarily, that singer would New York night life y old English castle. and Tarzan, the |Boland and Polly Moran furnish| g, farther and last at least ten |y share the Uptown | much of the rich comedy | years longer.” I o Express,” a typ | Included on this outstanding pro- |~ gjo Dal Monti stops abruptly. |ically fas Jing Wi st 1 Without Passion,” “Crime tern thrille jgram is “But here I am, talking too much - > 1;’/}”"[‘:‘3" by L;“ n Hecht a“if““”"; abcut talking too much, | MacArthur, famous authors of 14 on¢ S, o ™" ™ MINNESOTA FARMS Bl GROW BLACK CANE HOOL TAX DELINQUE Ideal Marriagf Ages Determined by Nazis TO AlD PHEASANTS announces that the best ages for marrying are 26 for men and 24 for' women. i But, it admits, only about one- tenth of the 509,597 weddings in this country last year were of cou- ples of those years. The department finds “the sharp th will be no famine for Clerk’s office. 1 A. W. HENNING, City Clerk. ‘nd\. School Tax Collector. | — - — | CARD PARTY ! The Ladies of Trinity Guild will| |sponsor a card party at Trinity Hall Monday evening. Play starts : promptly at 8:15. Public invited. increase o mariisges due to na- Good prizes. Admission 50c. adv. tional socialist encouragement” a i | source of great satisfaction. In 1933, it says, there were 7.9 marriages per 1,000 of population, compared to 10 per 1,000 in 1934. A tall & | corn family, ngxt winter. The project is co-operative be- | tween the state game and fish de- partment and more than 5,500 farm- ers who have contracted for plant- ing cane plots. In spring far utilize the cane are privile as fodder. d-bearing plant of the black amber cane when T MUSICIANS TOCAL | B NO. 1 | | S IRy | Meets Second and Fourth Sun- | A COMPLIMENTARY ticket awaits shocked furnishes shelter as well| Art Berg to see the big as food to the birds. Windrows of | double bill of SHE WAS A LADY |cane will weather above normal Secretary | and FARGO EXPRESS at the snows, officials , while droop- —e | UPTOWN THEATRE TONIGHT. ing tassels will provide accessible o food. Space inside shocks will fur- nish shelter. The Cainese pheasant's inability DUDE HAYNES, | | days Every Month—3 P. M. | | ters has been early recognized by | game managers. Intense cold, cou- pled with sleet storms, seal the in this manner, pheasants have| frozen by thousands throughout the northwest. The plan i is costing sportsmen | | $5,125. | 'MGM THRILLER COMES |'than 1,000 school SN€ | been filed with the Board of Liquor Control by the following LICENSE, by Have you paid your 1935 Terri- | |torial school tax? This tax, $5.00, : | '8T. PAUL, May 10—With 7254 payable before May 1st, and EERLIN, ks ‘d”"‘f'“_"]“‘f SO | geres in 73 counties under cultiva- | Pay your TAX NOW at City the nazl racial politics departmenb . g oxclusively for phe the upland game birds in Minnesota Seed is furnished | free under provision the grain will| be cut and shocked for the winter, | to cope with rigorous northern win-| birds’ normal provender. Weakened | TO CAPITOL SCREEN WITH SPLENDID CAST, and Madge STARTS Robert Young Evans head the excellent cast appearing in T()D/i Y “Death on the Diamond" Metro- dwyn - Mayer thriller which s at the Capitol Theatre to- Others in the cast are C Henry Gordon, Ted Healy, Edward hy, Nat Pendleton, DeWitt Jen- , Paul Kelly, Pat O'Malley and | oth Comedy, a detective mystery and gripping drama mingle with the ex- ment of the baseball field in film which is based on an orig- inal story by Cortland Fitzsimmons. It deals with mysterious crimes in a baseball team during a pennant race and was filmed with the co- operaticn of the St. Louis Cardi- aals, who are seen in the picture. e Finds U. S. Children Don’t Believe in Elves BELFAST, May 10.—Teaching the American children to belleve in fairles and hobgobblins is a job that requires lots of patience, laments Sir Hugh Robertson, conductor of the Glasge¥ Orpheus Choir. During an American tour with his choir, he said, he asked more children if they believed in the “little folk,” and me answer was an unanimous “No!"” h children on the other hand always reward him with an en- thusiastic “Yes!" he sald 2 the Game or Die” was the mysterious wariigg by lar e egemy th ROBERT YOUNG MADGE EVANS NAT PENDLETON TED HEALY AN M-G-M PICTURE NOTICE hercby given thai ap- liquor licenses have Notice is plications for the Alaska Bttlr‘ Wllfih- BOAT BOAT L!CENSE by Lh(* Alaska Steamship Company, Seattle, Wash- ington, for the¢ §.8. “Northwest- ern.” BOAT LICENSE, by the Alaska 1ship Company, Seattle, Wash- n, for the S.8. “Aleutian.” BOAT LICENSE, by the Al e - CHILDREN'S SATURDAY MATINEE—1 P. M. " ymship Company, Secttle, Wash- ngon.tor e 53 vueon” | STEEL ‘THREADS’ WILL REST HERE Eteamship Company, Wash- 1gton, for the S.8. ' RETAIL LICENSE, by Jim El- len, Willcughby, Avenue, Juneau, Alaska RESTAURANT LICE by Vira Wright, 329 Front S , Juneau, Alaska ROAD HOUSE LICENSE, by Ed- Jahnke, Auk Bay Inn, Ju- B VERA()I DISPENSARY LI- CENSE, by Sam Gazaloff, South ront Street, next to City Cafe, vJunum Alaska. RETAIL LICENSE, by Sam Gaz- aloff, South Front Street, near City Cafe, Juneau, Alaska. RETAIL LICENSE, by O. G. Hill- Hillmans Dock, Hoonah, Al- A hearing on these applications will be held by the Board of Li- lquor Control at Juneau, Alaska, on June 10th, 1935, at 2 p.m. Protests or objections against the {allowance of the above applications should be in writing and filed with the Board of Liquor Control at Juneau, Alaska, on or before the date of said hearing. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, May J, 1935, |BOARD OF LIQUOR CONTROL, By: Frank A. Boyle, Secy. First publication, May 10, 1935. Last publication, May 17, 1935. FINE | Watch and Jewelry Repairing : at very nalnmbl: rates | The transhay towers west of Yerba Buena island hown in this island tunnel in foreground. Cable spinning will start soon to link the island with San Francisco, in the background, and Oakland and Ber - e I)AH,Y EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY! | ‘ | Associated Press aerial photograph with the east approach of the | | PAUL BLOEDHORN o -y keley. CLOSE GUT on SKIRTS Tweeds or plzun colors Values to $6.50 Close Out Price $2.95 DOLLAR $6.00 Values Suturday RO AR A LINGERIE BLOUSES SHEER OR FINE MESH With a definite air of delicacy that is so tremendously chic! $1.35 gll‘llllllmflflllllllilIIIIIIIWIIMIHII!HIIMIIHI Men’s Shoes and Oxfords Sale Price $4.65—for $5.00 V.nlueb—Saturday Only $2.85 OLLAR DAY HHHHIHIIHIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHHIIHIIIH|l|||I|I||||I||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHHIIIHIIIIIHIMWNH”MM DAY SALE FOR SATURDAY ONLY Women’s Selby Oxfords, Ties and Pumps $5.85 SATURDAY ONLY $4.85 4.65 SATURDAY ONLY 3.65 $3.95 SATURDAY ONLY 2.95 ' $1.00 Special Discount On All Shoes $3.00 Or Over - - Arnold’s Bootery - - Next to First National Bank Only $3.65 Sale Price Sale Price Sale Price - Emmmmmmmmunmnm|mmu||mmu|||umu|lum|||mummnmmmuunumnmmmuumm

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