The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 22, 1927, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| | | | NPICKETT’ LACE MOVIE AND VAUDEVILLE MACK COMEDY COMPANY IN SIX ACTS MAXINE KLINE TAZZOMANIA A MUSICAL TREAT MADELINE LAMONT Prima-Donna FUN AND NONSENSE BOBBY MACK “Looney, that's all” “VERSATILE PIANO” RAY MOORE Comedian and Pianist And The Spicy Tabloid EARL CARROLL'S “VANITY PLACK OUTS” HOOT GIBSON in “CHIP OF THE FLYING U” Vaundeville 1 Shew 9:30 Fixst Show at at 8:45—Se Admission—Children 25¢, Ceming Thursday “BRIGHT LIGHTS” and change of Vaudeville LT Attractions At Theatres ADVENTUROUS SEX" IS AT COLISEUM TONIGHT be old.” the is bein “Dance, drink and for tomorrow you're That sec of freedom that Wl wide by the boy of today, and this ph ican life is in th Adventurous Coliseum for 18 to ba ;e picture which is at the night only. In this entc ra - Bov S the Queen rs, has what is her best role. Sh » rt of Patricis ster, a typical girl of tods in her frantic u for thrills and excitement, anages to get into a very ticklish situation that threatens disgrace and who, in a frantic moment, plunges into the roaring rapids of the N a ri- var, only to be saved in a thrill- ing airplane rescue by the youth whom she thought “to slow and old fashioned” to live in thece jazz mad The story has begn written and produced with just the right tem po, It is spirited and convincing; it pictures life as it act is among the youth whose “necking v, who, Youths | 40¢, Adults 50c, Loges 60 cents| h Web- | " VAUDEVILLE ries f who, not un lerst pecics o humar new f have r tried to stop thei pre with “don't WESTERN COMEDY NOW AT PALACE Flying U" n in Juneau in mq ind drew heart start te Faire ha 1 i s good went of a ook at and Hollywood nal beauty Mack Comedy openad last bill vaudeville is g 1t al this the mpany night with review of clsewhere movie CURWOOD STORY AT COLISEUM TOMORROW Ore scenery and Orogon in ilvered dense on climate, Oregon neral, peaks to her green forests and he multitudinon in roat th Ancient to the and Fri 10w of contributed th picture | ribbon-pattern treams kin The which comes next Thuraday measure, to Param | Hi Coliseum hway,"” day For of st the y Irvin headed, a the carly sce James Oliver Curwood Willat, the director, company of more than a hundred players into Oregon, the | nel including Jack Holt, Dove end Montagu Love, the person Bilii feat players objective the was the econd { the mid fork of | River, approximately | Coquille, Ore and in the of the log countr of the sequences i wre shows timbermen feil trees, a wonderful wplenty of compan plash dam o the Coquille 20 miles from on heart big 150 foot ind with ecameras meramgr all times the Willat ction filmad ( in imminent dan in the event of falling hi the entir equence from a log boom in the viver. At one time he lust balance nd only quick work saved hin from drowning Four seenes | ¥ each ca r at big trees directed {one of | way |CHARLES RAY AT 1 PALACE TOMORROW Robert Z. iconard has become famous for direetin: pictures that appeal primarily to the heart an the eye. Never he burder his andicnee with any well-m t lesson or “moral,” as he believes that entertainment as entertain ment should never becoms eachy.” So in his production of “Bright Light which is the attractior at the Palace tomorrow, there i moral, unless it is to “be your does 1f Charles Ray and Pauline Starke in the picture. Ray rt of the rube whe Tlly tries to imitate the order to imprecs | imsu city | vidson, Ned Sparks and Eugoni will be seen in the sup cast of the picture. The io was written by Jessi and Lew Lipton from story by Richard Connell | Special Notice | .. 4.5 | The Barber Snop Silver Fox | It is said | Really does trim your lox To suit the head | Please put this on file Don't be mislead At least give us a trial. {" 7. D. VAN ATTA, Prop. | Bess short ady o g FAMED REFORMED LIFER HELD Vietor Eytinge, a trouble again. He blames it 3 famed ex-convict who ‘‘came back,” is on the woman who saved him jail and who enabled him to become a wealthy, in bad ew York, He was arrested in Kansas checks in Pittsburgh. He lays Mrs. Eytinge, who ce that SHOW MAKES HITATPALACE from her | The Mack opened a t the P from Com leville engag last night and jud the laughs and applause giv 1 of the company ! are only fou v typi sented ere perse the company but al ville show is pr dances, comedy wct and ending of the company are pisno The mos with a member versatile Bobby Junean for cannot der” for too well known il men Jewish comedian | en and toschange in any He night his Mack is in to need spec tion as a be 1 acts kelcn Wi weters time cla hand last and in good bits given a all of his logue a nifty dance: | well Maxine Kline i and costumes her act She gave the Oriental Dance “Sudan,” Russian ¢ er “Katinka” and | ‘Doll Dance,” endin soft shoe dance receiving plendid ion by the lar weline Lamont is singers heard in iome time. She has a personality which wins from the front row down the top row of the r opening number was ' from “May Time" ponded to an encore with Little Spanish Town.” Her number “My Hero” from fth Chocolate § rec > audience one of the ! Juneau for pleasing friend stair gallery. ! “Sweet and “In i to He he she | ar ajfr " dome in Co-| costume, with white forth thunderou she gracefuily mial irew wig, | applause | aw wmd it 1gain Ray Moore, pianist, did hi t from the orchestra pit, most ned in sketch gave h litt de t apably and then j on the stago Carroll’ Vanities Black-Outs” a novelty | in tabloid sed the vaudevill- | of how. The entire company parti- |t cipated in this number. While ! £ little spicy, that is whs A d |er Tomorrow night | a complete change | 88 will feature tio |48 her chief part tonight here will be nd Miss Kline Black Bottom” of the show again fo ar | of > - U. S. Gains Big Trade | countrie Balance with Europe| (Continued from Page One.} the entire year 1927 will Europe a trade debtor to the tunc of more than §1,000,000,000. i Britain and Germany ars the brunt of this avy | United Kin with n the United $297,741,754 and shipments to Am. | ir rica of $108,738,674, shows a trade | cu deficit in 1927 of $189,003,080, | more t half of the t America dropped off while her purch iner 193,964, giving her a trade g 629,480 as compared with the | W opening four months of 1926 i Germany with purchase $148.995,779 and sales of only 107,018, records a trade def 1927 of $85,688,761 America fell off § her purchases incre 344, making her trade los compared with 1926 total 153,735. Two Br: show tr: to §63,- Customers Last year ¢he American sales o Britain and Germany were just | A fraction more than half of Bu-| NOTICE OF HEARING OF FINAL ACCOUNT In the Commissicner’s Court for the Territory of Alaska, Divi- sion Number One: Before A. F.| McLean, U. S§. Commissioner and Ex-officio Probate Judge, Haines Precinct. the Matter of HARRY JONES, deceased. Notice is hereby given that Harry Higgins, administrator of: the estate of Harry Jomes, de-! ceased, having filed this day his first and final ageount of his ad- ministration of said estate, and having herewith filed a petition for fhe final distribution of said estate, Now I, A. F. McLean 5 Commissioner and Ex-Officio Pro bate Judge for the Precinct of Haines, Alaska, do hereby fix and appoint Wednesday, August 10th, 1927, at the hour of 2 o'clock inj the afternoon, at the court room| of the above mentioned court, as the time and place of the hear- ing by the court of the applica- tion for the settlement of said first and final account and for the hearing of said petition for final distribution. It is further ordered that the above notice be published in “The Daily Alaska Empire” for four consecutive weeks, and also post ed in three conspicuous places in the Haines Precinet, one of whith shall be at the front door of the Post Office, G'ven under my hand and the| seal of office this 10th day of In the ‘Estate of U. 8. June A. D. 1927, - 4 (Seal) A. F. McLEAN, U. 8. Commissioner and Ex- Officio Probate Judge. First publication, June 15, 1927, " |Last publication, July 6, 1927, being worn there. frock over a pink satin & of Swiss lace ol creaw over white satin, and a %s»eohair braid bat trimmed with peesia. rope's 1ast | this country took from Iurope 'shows uro over | ers ting whift bill will be repeated |15 America two countries ade 3 of | he = niimmmummmmmnmumnmmmnm d Insofar as Hollywood sets as many styles as New York does, it may be well to study what’s Left to right we have: Bar a Kent, in an ensemble of heavy rose erepe n two shapes and a hat of rose and gold mectal cloth; Gretchen Young in a pink orgendie ; Kathryn McGuire in an orchard colored basque with wide bands cta in scallops around the hem; June Marlow in a gown of imported urple and violet ta purcha and ul German sales action less than the ish i’l ~y.;‘ $16,518,008, Compared FAULKNEI{ BUYS America a | ivith , these countries suffes of what I with It Uni only s | half in their ed trade th not > OUR CUSTOMERS that America down but i m her ving their competitors break Italy, Switze and Greece soem the big benefit Switzerland has a balancr her favor for the four months 1927 of $10917,6904 out of a al trade between that count America of only $16,60 compared with 1 she eased her advantage by 1. While Swiss purchases incr § America increa Faulkner property d by Dr Juneau, Angele been Weather i and e expire iting her urchases shif two be: in 0 her buying the loei i ) No, 15 Front building formerl nn vay frc Cal t of the occupied rland, Swc as ( to be get. |k this | to France, n numb and we from Jul I the e, a8 w past. We will be -1 Friday, June 1 MINERS'S POOL HALL for John to illn at least owner Stey RANS , be Manager, Wee d ! A. F. McKinnon, K n | .o 101d papers for sale at The Empire. brother 1) adv outh due wdv los to 0 through the fir: [ 7[” /' N(‘I‘I I 1927 with a bl E} Al V4 VI ¥ R her craedit, out between the two 64,678, Sweden came ur months of 1ce of $612,850 a total trade of § HING]. WE CARRY A LARGE STOCK OF THIS FAMOUS BRAND AND ARE PREPARED TO SERVE YOU Cuts Debit reduced her trad» bit to § 230, just a fraction than 10 per cent of the 491 total trade between the But e 1926 of §14 Italy Italy in 1927 ore A Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. orod a gain of ; r aceonnt with Am her sales here ttir her American Denmark in 1927 got balance sheet for a debit of | 20,038 of a total trade be the two countr $21 compared ‘ 1 increa 72,010 whilc $29,235,889 socked or ALL COAL MAY LOOK ALIKE you winl heating 1 our bet- afier trying our's be convineed that the quality varies, also you learn ~that baking with coal means less coal and Y ter results We carry a full line of Feed rk fell off §274,082, - () end our transfer service 0. G Belginm, Holland, in, ‘and| | ) N4 )N Whia Vs debit be- | Fhone 114 while Amer Holland’s §14 $11,204.801 ant Holly-Gee-Red DE MOOSE’S is gonna ave a picnie; is yer goins Pop says I can take my bat’n glove, gee T hope the City League has a game of ball before that time so’s we can geta ball, Griggse says there’s gona be lotsa i-scream; soda pop: hot dogs; and gee a long ride like that to the pienic place; believe me red I'm gonna take that ride and all the fun in, if I ave ta walk. And say red I betcha a million doliars I ken beatcha in the hun- dred yards; and my Pop ken beat your Pop in the shot put; and my Mar ken beat your Mar in the egg race: an my brother ken beat your brother in the sack racc, gee Red you aint got no one in your family that ken do anything. believe me; my family is all the Doughnuts. HERE THEY GO 70 THE MOOSE PICNIC Free Cars Starting from Noland’s Corner Sunday June 26 GET READY———— — THEY'RE OFF rar FREE-Coffee, Mill:, Sug Bring your lunch if you so desire but there will be plenty of Hot Dogs and Sandwiches - twe of hi S ——— e LT T | SLCANE FROPERTY | will | TONIGHT ONLY 7:30 Iv’s Canterbury Night OF CANDY—20 LBS.—FREE the Baitle Cry of Freedom! 1 ts uth! ind a EARLE WILLIAMS HARRY T MOREY —it's as full of Syncopation as a Sazophone! Meet 'em all, “The A: “The' Praivie Flo “Lamp Lighters,” “Cra tail cf Youth! n's Brides,” Workers,” o in ihis e AUBREY C°MEDY PATHE NEWS 10—20—40- s 50 cents Thursday—THE ANCIENT HIGHWAY—A Curwood Stcry SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION—Thursday and Friday "LT. BYRD'S POLAR FLIGHT N7 : UL LU U TR U U T T TR T TR Made to Measure came Good Lining— or Money 125 Fabiics $23.75 Per Suit Refunded TWENTY FABRICS TO SELECT FROM-—TWO STYLES— OR READY-TO-WEAR heavy good looking eloth Two Suits or Suit and Overcoat for $29.50 Bargains in boys and youths suits. “Look before you leap * Sce before you buy R. H. WILLIAMS, Reck Apts., Telephone 3804 All Wool— Any Style— WHATEVER YOU BUILD USE CONCRETE EVERLASTINGLY PERMANENT We Mix and Deliver Any Quality A-1 Granite Concrete Ready to Place——Phone 32 CONCRETE PRODUCTS MFG. CO. il IflllllImmmflmflflflmfllfllmlIlllIlllllIllllllllnlllllllllllllllllllll"'l ataa

Other pages from this issue: