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DON'T MISS IT! A ————————— MUSIC 'WS/C-MHSIC /A the soul of the: '""\ enius Haifets Latest News March of Time Erstwhile Mariner Dizzy Walching Pheasans Halch Alaska mariner nursemaid, reported Loday from the Petersburg experimental game farm that 284 pheasant chick 1 already batched from e the 'm and that more arc ex ed. The young birds are of four var icties Jensen, erstwhile patrol boat skip- for the Alaska Game Commis- notified Executive Officer Frank Dufresne that broods of chicks are also being hatched in territory around the farm by Mon golian pheasants liberated last year and wheih spent the winter in the wild Howard Jensen, turned ave ai per sion, - Empire cl;m;lhcds bring results. o ) HOW’S Al If you are working in RICE & A Grease Steam Odors let us explain how this can be eliminated with a Ventilating Fan PHONE 34 USICDRAMA - PLAYING NOW AS HIT HERE “They Shall Have Music” Is Featured at Capitol Theatre A new landmark. in motion pic- ture history was reached last night when Samuel Goldwyn, one of Hol- lywood’s foremost producers, brought Jascha Heifetz and his immortal violin music to the . screen in “They Shall Have Mu- sic,” a richly human story which had a gala premiere at the Capitol Theatre Sunday and received the thunderous plaudits of a capacity audience. In addition to marking the screen debut of the great Hei- fetz, “They Shall Have Music” also brings to millions of moviegoer: all over the globe the thrilling mu- sic of the California Junior Sym- phony, an orchestra composed of | 45 boys and girls who have been hailed as juvenile prodigies, Directed skilfullly and dramatic-® ally by Archie Mayo, “They Shall Have Music” is the story of a slum boy, who has inherited talent for music from his dead father. The boy lives his life on the streets, frightened by an irate stepfather, | lured by gang stories and anxious to make easy money. Through al series of strange events, he lands | in a settlement music school run| by an idealistic professor, who takes him under his wing. When (hc‘ grateful. youngster learns of the | desperate financial straits of the school, he undertakes to win the | patronage of the great Heifetz, who is in New York for (,.nncg,m Hall concerts. - B. P. W. CLUB DINNER TOMIGHT A 6:30 o'clock dinner, followed by an installation service, will be he!d this evening at the Scottish Rite Temple by the Business and Pro- fessional Women's Club. Installing officers for the oc- casion will be past presidents Mrs, | William Paul and Miss Caroline Todd, | | | | | Y()UR R? a “KITCHEN FOG” of HLERS CO. 1 i i 1 i ' 1 | i i | i i ! 1 i ! SEE ALL THIS on your Southern Pacific “Grand Circle Tour” < for only 590 roundtrip WORLD'S FAIR | THE DAILY ALASKA. EMP!RE MONDAY, MAY 20 1940 Dmly Crossi ACROSS * 1. Bartered for money &, Part played ! Profioun 12; Great lake 13. Dillseed 14. Rocky pinnacle 16. Outline or contour 18, Preceding nights Solution of l‘nurm‘t nmh vord Puzzle ; 1 rmvn‘-! tor: lawyers 11. Pertaining te musical soumd Bristle Crustacean Tnlk|n Into 20. n 22 23. Measure of paper 19. Harbors 20. Frighten 28, California w rockfish Sin % st covering 28, In bed 31, Lo Steering ap- paratus Anglo-Saxon money. of uccount Gaelly: Stains. Animal ralsed 3. Crippled 38. Utilize 39 Appear 41. Ballots 43. Compound ether 45. Paper fastener 47. Bellevers in communica- tion with departed spirits 5’ Light brown . Fish S Ibsen character Unit of work 56 Coples 67. Long narra- tite poem DOWN 1. Unsweetened 2. Mountain: comb. form for beef Mali . Heather Think: . Princely 8. The linden Italian tree 4. Postpone & Pury 6. Burden 7. Gaelic sea god 8. Public store= house: on scfentift= y 3 Mnko well Licks up with ouse 9. Hasty pudding 10. Derisive cry 11. Sea eagles 49. Soak up 50, 5 | 61. Pouch S %Sl’a”g» Dinner Party . For Chee Hermann Hflfl | WII”//IWII ; fl.lfl anmad o IIIIV//H et . 7 /’/flflll, | flfllll’%/flill”// ning IIIIIHII!IEIHH dEEN JdNEN AEw/ YEE JdEEE dNEN Ensemble To Appear IIL(omerI First Appearance of Or- ganization Is To- REPUBI.I(S FLAY NAZI INVASION | OF LOWLANDS Twenty-one American De- mocracies Call Germany | "Unjustified, Cruel” PANAMA CITY, May 20. — The | | United States and twenty other Am- erican Republics characterized Ger- | many’s invasion of Belgium, Holland | morrow Night The Ladies Ensemble will make a first appearance tomorrow night in a special concert to be given in Lhe Scottish Rite Temple, accompanied by soloists Marye Berne, soprano; Merle Janice Schroeder, sopranc; Ernest Ehler, tenor; Stanley Tollef- sen, violinist with Ruth McVay and Irene Rulaford as accompanists. The following is the complete pro- | gram for tomorrow night and a cap- acity crowd is anticipated: 1 America The Beautiful—Bates- Ward—Soloists and Ladies Ensemble. 1n England—(First performance in Alaska)—Samuel Richards Gaines. Forget Me Not—(PFirst perfor- | mance in Alaska)—Samuel Richard Gaines | Scandia—(An epic of the North-| land)—Samuel Richard Gaines. Of All The Year 'Tis Summer— (First time in Alaska)—Samuel Ri- chard Gaines.—-Ernest Ehler. 11 | L'cte: (Summer)—Chaminade. | Minnelied—Arranged by Kramer. | Let My Song Fill Your Heart— Charles—Merle Janice Schroeder. 1w " A Kiss In The Dark—Herbert Just Awearyin’ Por You—Jacobs- Bond. Calm as The Night-Bohm. God Bless America—Berlin— dies Ensemble. La- v | Meditation (from Thais)—Mass- enet, Schon Rosmarin—Kreisler. Adoration — Borowski. — Stanley Tollefsen and Gene Rulaford, ac- companist. and Luxembourg as “unjustified and | cruel.” | In a joint declaration about the German drive through the low| countries, President Boyd. of Pxn-, ama published a statement today on which 21 Republics reached,an | agreement last night. The govern- | ment of Panama acts as a rlcarh\«;l house for Pan-American neutrality matters. | OverOne Hundred | Attend Federal ‘ Dinner and Dame‘ One hundred and ten Federal and | Territorial employees and. . their| guests gathered in the Gold Room | of the Baranof Hotel Saturday ev- | ening for dinner and dancing. Guest of honor for the evening was | Mrs. Ernest Gruening. Ray Ward was installed as pres| i | dent of the National Federation of Federal Employees during a cere- mony following the banquet; Pred | Geaslin as Vice President, and John | Keyser as Secretary-Treasurer. Capt. | John @lark and Hugh J. Wade were | installed: as: directors. | Entertainment, arranged by Louise Kemper, Jerry Walte and Vincent | Beauchamp, included accordion. mu- sic. by Tony Dalsanto, singing and dancing by Margaret Gianacos, and a wizard of magic, J. Malcom Greany. s | Josephine, . Wright and leu'fo\ Pearce were in charge of reserva- | tions for the affair. @ It's really amazing how much you can see on 2 Southern Pacific trip East through California. The example at right is a Grand Circle Tour to New York, but on a trip to any eastern destination, you can include San Francisco and Los Angeles—in most cases for not 1¢ extra rail fare! TO NEW YORK AND BACK One way via Californial Mey 25—Sept. 29 = LOS ANGELES HOLLYWOOD * SOUTHERN ARIZONA = * CARLSBAD | CAVERNS NATIONAL PARK ($9.75 extra) *® NEW ORLEANS OLD SOUTH cars and coaches. 135 1 Pullman charge). From Seattle ROUND TRIP in standard Southern Vi Floods of Spring—Rachmaninoff. We Two Together—Kernochan. Death of Jean D’'Arc—Bembery. Vi1 Your Eyes—Friml—Ernest Ehier, Stanley Tollefsen and Ladies En- semble. Tales of The Vienna Woods— Strauss-Ehler—Marye Berne, Ernest THREE ARRIVE FROM' SEATTLE “ABOARD TAKU The steamer Taku of the Alaska Ehley and, Lagl E““m"'“ Transportation Company docked at Femmer’s dock last Saturday at 4:30 'p.m. with three passengers from | Seattle for Juneau and left early | Sunday morning after unloading TEN THOUSAND DIE N ROTTERAM AS T it st e NAZIS HURL BOMBS Passengers arriving .in Juneau | were Mrs. Leslie Meyers and M. am Mrs, T. H. Lucas. Passengers. leaving; were Herbert ‘Lee for Tenakee and Mrs. E. M 4LOS ANGELES, Cal, May 20. Mayor Fletcher Bowron: of Los An- geles suggests that the census of America’s fifth largest city himself was overlooked. Mayor his official position entitled him to being counted by Uncle Sam Mayor said that a check showed | about 11 percent of the City Hall employces had not been counted, | land he presumed that the same | percentage, of omissions prevailed | throughout. the city, The tentative Los Angeles popu= | 1ation was announced as 1,385,613, |an increase of about 12 percent | | since 1930, It was the first time in “he present century. that Los An- | geles failed to double its popula- | tion hetvlaen counts, R A stag .dinner p.u1v was given | ing Alaska trips thi | Ssaturday evening for Chee Hermann, | son of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Hermann ‘at the family home on West Eighth | Street. The: occasion was his six- an/d | Il%flll | teenth birthday. After dinner the remainder of the evening was spent in playing games. Guests were Griffith Nordling, Le- roy Vestal, Dean' Alien, Simpson | MacKinnen and Horau' Adams, Jr. Rainbow Girls Make Plans for Officers| Plans for entertaining officers of the Grand Assembly were discussed at Saturday night's meeting of the Order of Rainbow Girls in the Seot- tish Rite Temple. After.a short business session there was initiation. Later in the evening Nina Solov- ieva, well, known. soprano, gave an informal: musicale. 'XODIAK GUIDES HEAD IS VISITOR Charles Madsen, President of Ko- diak Guides, a nihe-man outfit cat- ering to wealthy sportsmen, was a Juneau visitor today enroute to the States on the steamer Yukon. He [ EHLER PRESEN h LUTHERAN ACCOMPBANISTS “Ruth-McVey and ‘Gene Rulaford COHCBRT e e i e} Merle Janice Schroeder [+ Over Census vas| the strongest drama of this not very thorough, since his Honor | The | SIS R G R R R e 9 { TOMORROW b ERNEST MARY NIGHT Ladies’ Ensemble and Soloist ADMISSION—Adults 50c, Students 35¢ MASONIC TEMPLE—8:15 P. M. PRISON FILM OPENED | SUNDAY AS FEAFURE | OF COLISEUM SHOW | The teaming of James Cagney and George Raft in “Each Dawn L Die;”. which opened yesterday at the Coliseum Theatre, brings to= gether the screen’s two topmost portrayers of authentic modern |hard guys, and the result is a brilliant reality—far and away | prison picture which achieves a type ever to reach the screen. |~ Sent to jail as the result of a Bowron declared that he thought| frame-up, Cagney is. naturally re- bellious. His attitude is met. with ‘brulnnLy by the prison authori- ties and that results in a degen- | eration which makes of him, on the surface at least, as tough and vicious a man as any convict in the place After he Intter gives him: a loyalty which eventually results in Raft him- self laying down his life to prove his frie innocense. And thus Ralt vindicates the only principle to which he has adhered in his whole life. aves Raft's life, the will visit his daughter in Portland. Madsen reported a fairly good |season in prospect. Two hunters | from Shrevesport, Louisiana, are | now out in the field. Others living |In Cleveland and Texas arc plan- year. - FIND RARE METAL;FIND NO DEMAND ROANOKE, Va., May 20. Two Virginia Tech professors have dis- covered a rich deposit of the mineral ‘gamum Now they are trying (u find what to do with it. | J. W. Whittemere and P. 8. D(’m'. of the Tech ceramics department, | found a mineral containing 0.2 per cent of gallium which, according to the U. S Bureau of Standards, is the richest mineral in gallium con- | tent. known. | | So far, however, gallium is only |a laboratory curiosity. The total world output in 1937 was 50 kilo- grams, or 110 pounds, produced chiefly in Germany. This. command~ ed a price of about $1.800 a pound Any extensive increase in produc- tion would make it a “drug on the market,” until’ some commercial use is found for it. ‘ The only advantage to be ;,am»d‘ by incn easing production and lower- | BERNE TED BY LADIES AID Stanley Tollefson o MIGHTY HUSKY vouuc.srins' LOOKS LIKE YOUVE BEEN READING OUR ADS ON HOW nimnfux CANNED SALMON 1S ¢ l NTO MILLIONS of U. S. homes this year health message: flxtm‘ad in Canned, $al Salmon adverti iy i 8 m values %fi ! This is the story that g is telling housewives and Sei A8IN, mnthets throuflx national cireulation magazines. It’s another fant ut.. Alaska’s product that is en- Sgo\?«'?)men to serve €anned 590 ROUND TRIP in chair Pullmans (plus reduced For folders, reservations, ad mation, write K. E. Agt., Pass. Dept., 1405 ash. [ 619 Hows St., Vancouver, B ORMANDY, Gen. Pass. Agt, 622 Plcll: Bidy, Portland, Oce, ditional infor- Fourth Ave., ium.. TO! A *® NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR Mey 11—0ct. 27 gation charges: that German bomb- | ers killed more than 10,000 clvilums\ in.. Rotterdam: alone. The prospect | that ether cities would be similarly treated forced Dutch armies ta.lay! down their. arms. But the country | will._continue, fighting. .a com-| | munique from the legation said, PARIS, May 20.—The Dutch Je- | Felton for Hoonah. - eee GIVE STREET PARADE Director Ed Berutto and. mem- bers of his: splendid. Anchorage band,. recently gave a parade .on/ Sunday, then a street concert which drew hundreds and caused expres-, sions of great appreciation, cauraging Salmom in theu' homes. reason, too, for Alask Canned' Salmon! Food authorities say mon contains a greater store of impo almost any other food. Good — and more U. Protein, for a families to emjoy more that Canned Sal- rtant nutrients than instance—the food OWNED AND ODFRATED JAMES CAGNEY—GEORGE RAFT in | “Each Dawn I Die” with JANE BYRAN—GEORGE BANCROFT ALSQ CARTOON MUSICAL 'NEWS”ALSQ - ing the cost would be that more people could experiment with gal- lium in_a search: for its possible industrial use. BEAVERS STUMPED PUEBLQ, Colo., May 20. Bill Rutherford, CCC camp foreman, tells about. the beaver colony that mistook a fence for an aspen grove. “Beaver stqgre aspen bark for food,” says Rutherford. “A rancher on Willow Creek built a fence and used green aspen for posts. The beaver tried to fell the posts, severing them at the base, buti the! wires held them upright. The ani- in Douglfi |II|IIIIlIIIIIII|III|III|II|IllllllmlllIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIlllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"IIII ) THRIFT €0-0P 767-PHONE=767 Retailers of Famous SHURFINE and TASTEWELL Products—Offers swunsns s wers TONAFISH. 7= 19 e ssna COFFEE 1 e 33 RITZ CRACKERS 1w e 30c swvey woows BEEF STEW v . on 1 gt LIMA BEANS 2 v e 23c Large White Beans WHITE UNCOATED RICE Z L Jo: pkgs. for l% cvns TOMATOCATSUP 14 o e T [ Extra Good—Made with Sweettosi mals tried again, this time severing | the posts higher. Still the posts remained upright, “They are busy yet trying to fell those trees’ and it appears they et themselves an all: winter -- When making, up, spiced cookies to accompany hot or. cokd beverages, use pineapple juice ia place of the liguid ealled for in the recipe. The tart flavor is very good with spicy blends. frut® Gamstipated? t%‘;"]:l”:llm g § hott. A-.LERJKA by ‘Gay'si Drug Store. Butler-Mauro Drug Co. st ead HURFINE SHURFI The General Public is invited to trade at our store. = Con- trary to the general belief stock purchase is NOT C PULSORY to participate in the savings offered through fl!e \ SHURFINE cnd TASTEWELL PRODUCTS. B Get the THRIFT' CO-OP HABIT—Phone Your Order Earlyg! OO ROERCOOE w5t element you expect & main dish to-supply.Conned § mon is rated more abundantin life-g $ pro than mmosfl any otl:::‘ ; h rare ‘‘sunshine’ vi " good source of vitamin D. Salman ‘A and G plus the valuable: food m hosphorous—that help keep teef ealthy. Add: these health facts to the Canned Salmon and you 9!l . Alaskans as well as to the U.! good eating—serve Canned