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PICKETT’ PATL.ACE S TONIGHT FRIDAY SATURDAY JUNE 7—8—9 2 SHOWS EACH NIGHT AT 7:30 AND 9:15 THIS IS . A BIG , FEATURE a osmopolitan roduction, All lovers of real melo- drama should see— 4 THE FILM FROM THE NOVEL SENSATION! with ANTONIO MORENO RENEE ADOREE Concert by Mae Pauly’s Orchestra 7 to 7:30 Prices—10-25-50-Loges 60c “The Flaming Forest” has played in all large cities from 50 cents to $1. This: show will open with a late Kinogram and one of the features is the Emden German Cruiser arriving at E “her home posxt. A Buster Brown Comedy is the added mirthmaker. * COMING SUNDAY HARRY I'AANGDON “The lgtron g Man” Equally as funny as “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp” Attractions ‘ At Thectres TUTHE FLAMING FOREST” | | 18 AT PALACE TOMN'GHT | o A 4 Two tons of gunpowder. Three million square lumber, Five hundrzd rifles. One thousand costumes. More than a thousdnd ‘people, _including Indians more than a dozen tribes. Seven hundred horses. A complete field kitchen and a corps of waiters. A special train and ten thous- and dollars worth of provisions for people and feed for animals. These were a few of the items required during the filming of “The Flaming Forest,” made for Cosmopolitan. by Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer and . being shown at the Palace . Theatre. X This picture, directed by Regi- nald Barker, with a cast of morg than twenty notable screen play- ers, is one of the most lavish pro- ductions of the year and was adapted to the screen by Walde- mar.,, Young _from the, famous James Oliver Cunwood novel of the same ;name. . depioting . the wilderness of the Norfhwest Ter- Titory at, the time of the organi- zation of the Northwest Mountcd P‘v%gw % e ol ¢ .The picture is dnterpreted by an_all-atar cast of some twenty players, headed by Antonia Mo- reno, !'rho “of “Mare Nostrim," “Love’s lindness” - and “The Temptress” apd .Renee Adoree, heroine of the, “Big. Parade,” “Blarney” and other Metro-Gold- wyn-Mayer pioctures. ' ’ ~Tom -O'Brien, ..made . famous overnight by -his role’ of “Bull" in “The Big Parade” and Bert Roach, featured by M-G:M in cuse Me,” are seen in comedy 32 B2 ieet of extra from | Tea | UNITED STATES, roles among the year. Oscar Beregi, famous Hungarian actor and Gardner James, hailec 15 one of the greatest young play ers of the year, are among the principal members of the cast Claire McDowell, who played the mother of Ramon Novarro in| ‘Ben-Hur,” has the important rolc funniest of th | “COLLEEN" SHOWING [ COLISEUM TONIGHT | " Laughte! d story of racing hearts feature F Films' latest release, “Colleen to the Coli seum, which has its first showing at that theatre tonight. With Madge Bellamy in the stellar role and such outstanding screen fav orites as 'J. Farrell Macdonald, McNamara, Sammy Cohen Charles. Morton and Marjoric Beebe in the supporting cast, this delightful comedy drama is an entertainment that registers high in humor, pathos, suspense and thrills. The story deals with two Irish families in Old Erin and then in America. The delightful Madge Bellamy plays the role of the de- mure daughter of one of them who rides the family pride, Col- leen, to victory on a race track and at the same time rides into the hearts of her audience with her beauty, loveliness and sympa- thetic portrayal of her rol Charles Morton is her while J. Farrell Macdonald Tom McGuire are the two cible fathers, who, with Ted Namara, as the groom, will bring gales of laughter from the audl ence. The comedy is a Mack Sennett, “Fight Night.” hor; and Iris lover, and BIG COMEDY AT PALACE SUNDAY ciation of effort ar s shown by Harry L cently when he promoted Capra from chief comedy structor to director. Capra acted in the pacity on “Tramp, Tramp,” and was promoted to a directorship by the star on the production of “The Strong Man,” his latest First National feature comedy coming to the Palace Sun- day. Priscilla Bonner, Gertrude tor, William V. Mong, Robert Kim and Arthur Thal 0 prise Langdon’s supporting in this vehicle, ‘which duced under the management William H. Jenner. — e Leon Permanent Waye, $12.50. Fern Beauty Parlor. —adv ngdon re Frank con former Tramp ca As Me: com- cast pro- of L OFFICE ANCHORAGF, ATIASKA. U. S. NON-MINERAL SURVEY No. 1657 Seriai. No. 0319 NO1iCE GZ APPLICATION IN THE MATTER OF THE AP- PLICATION of the DEEP SEA SALMON COMPANY, a corpor- atien, for' leave to enter and purchase a tract of land, con- sisting of 14.36 acres, as a trade and manufacturing site, located on Chichagoff Island, Territory of Alaska. Notlce is hereby given that the Deep Sea Salmon Company, a cor- peration, duly organized and ex- isting under the laws of the State of Washington, and qualified to engage in business in the Terri- tory of Alaska and in the State of Washington, and whose Alas- kan post office address is Port Althorp, Alaska, and whose Washingfon post office address is Colman Building} Seattle, Wash- ington, has filed its application in the United States Land Office in Anchorage, Alaska, to purchase and en’:r upon as a Trade and Manufacturing Site the lands em- braced in U. S. Non-Mineral Sur- rey No. 1657, which are situated on the west shore of Port Al- thorp, Chichagoff Island, in' the Territoyy of Alaska, one and three quarter miles southeast of Point Lucan, Latitude 58° 7° 50" Horth, Longitude 136° 20" 00” west, containing 14.36 acres,' and more particularly described as toilows, to-wit: Commeacing at Corner No. 1, on mean high tide line on* west shore of Port Althorp, Alaska, whence U. 8. L. M. "tea THE DAILY. ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY;: JUNE 7, 1928. San Franci Off to Af o Woman rica After Wiich Doctors’ Lore Alcne, except for native guides and pack carriers, Mrs, John Fletcher, of San Francisce, intends to travel 3,000 miles of African trails frem Cape Tcwn at cne cnd of the continent to Cairo at the cther, Above che is shown p are part cf the wardrobe che is t By DOROTHY RUSSELL (Asscciated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, June 7-—Wive mothers aeed nhot e tied (o th tea cups if they “think in big circles” instead of confining their ughts to small diameters and doing something to fulfill stifled ambitions while the thinking is going on. Mrs. John Fletcher, fe of a mining cngineer in San Fraucisco, can this conclusion year she was dary and wishing (i the wilds of / the land of her heart's | since a chance reading in her girl- hood of a book on the Dark Conti- nent. In moderate circumstances, with a home, a hushand and a son to! care for, her girlhood vlr';# seem- impogsible of accomplish Neverthelegs, she is on to Cape To to begin mile trek ac s the Low Riv count between Lake Ny a and Luoke Tanganyika, and on to Cairo. And she will be the first woman to make the trip alone, except for the nati porters and guides in her s \ Amid canvas trunks and equip- ment in her rcom in a London hotel, she told how it happened. | “My int t in primitive peo-| ples was first fostered by the weird stories told me by an old negro mammy who nursed me as 2 child in Louis, where | was born,” she said. 1 “As I g up negro melodies, | the religionus emotions of the| blacks, their witcheraft worship and primitive remedies for mala dies, aroused a ( re to ce them to their sour and this in-| terest was increazed when my marriage to a mining engineer took me to live in mining camps in the West and in Alaska, where I came to know the Indians and Eskimos and enlarged my) Iy ant ing mant. | way 3,000 her are in moderate stances, and 1 had to keep housé, bring up my son and care for my husband just like thousands of | other women all over the world, but when my boy reached his ’teens and went off to school, I determined to earn the money for a trip to Africa. During four months of each ¢! the past few years 1 have tak a job of some sort and Have | side my earn- ings towards the cxpedition. “While I am in Africa my son is going off with the Boy Scouts on a sea trip to Honolulu and we are going to compare notes about our experiences when 1 return in Octobe From Cape Town Mrs. Fletcher No. 1657 . bears south .16° 8’ 24" east 16.24 chains dls- tanf; thence west 20.30 chalns to Corner No. 2; thence North 11.18 chains tor Corner No. 3; thence East 6.85 chains to Corner No. 4; « ithence, meandering the. mean high tide line on west shore of Port Althorp, Alaska, south 26° 59° East 3.48 chains, South 45° 30’ East 3.256 chains, South 82° 45’ East 3.33 chains, South 31° 18’ East 3.16 chains, North 86° 56’ East 3.18 chains; South €7° 04’ -Bast 1.05 chains, South 13° 20’ East 1.44 chains, South 18° 30’ West 0.58 chains, ;to Cornfer.: : No 1, the place of beginning. Declination 31° 30’ East. Any and all persons claiming any portion of the above described tract are required to file in the United States Land Office, at An- chorage, Alaska, their adverse ¢laim qr claims during the period of publication, of witlin :thirty (30) days thereafter. '~ * DATED at Anchorage, Al this 7th day of Apri. 3% al J. LINDLEY GREEN, i Register, U. 8. Land Office. - | First publication, April 13, 1928, will travel to Beira in Portuguese Bast Africa, and then to the rail- head at Blantyre in Nyasaland, where she will pick up her safari of porters and supplies and start on her trek along lLake Nyasa to Panganyika Territory. - This will lead her through some of the wildest jungle in ?fricn. :\]'lh:-'rc her only stopping places wi he tribal villages. From Lake Vie- toria &he will follow the accus- tomed routes to Cairo, Mrs. Fletche three zrn(u apd.-two ‘suitcases revealed n incongruous cquipment for- her wdventur@ Khaki riding breeches and shirts, stout riding boots, a pith helmet and a warm leather | “coat comtrasted strikingly with dainty satin slippers, smart eve- ning gowns and a pile of delicate lingerie. ou think 1 intend to - startle! e natives in evening dress, don't l;}tlm." Mrs, Fletcher said, smiling. “They are for use when T strike a white colony, where the British follow their national custom of dressing for dinner, even in dark- est Africa.” 7 . NOTICE ' Fifieen hundred dozen large, resh ranch eggs arrived today. canvas While they last we will deliver)Geo. Baggen as hostesses. ‘VM have fipighed fancy work are at $10.00 per case or 3 dozen for $1.00. D. B. Femmer, Phone —adv. | lund for .23 ‘to |vra.s addressing the Federation of acking the da'nmty garments that aking from Londen. MERRY MAKERS WILL PRESENT “SCHOOL DAYS” Tonight and Frid company at the Coliseum will pre- sert the ever new play entitled, ‘School Day In the show you will sce the .old maid school teacher, the silly girl, the bac bo, , doing just the tricke you did when you were a kid. The show is full of clean comedy andbright songs and mu- sical numbers. Hal Harris wil play the part of the silly gir), and it is said he makes about thé funniest girl one has ever 'seem. ¢ the popular {Tom Parker will be the bad boy{ Lions Club of Culver City, Cal, and Kdna Scott the teacher who tries to make him behave. This is a real laugh show and is one of the best in the Merry Makers’ repertoire. Next Tuesday and Wednesda the biggest amateur show ever in Juneau will be held at the iscum in conjunction with the Merry Makers = show. Five prizes will be given Tues day night and the winners will be eligible for the grand prize to be given Wednesday night. Mr. Parker already has fourteen acts booked. Dog and Horse Hejpl Carrier Deliver Mail PIERRE, 8. D, June 7—Jack and Jiggs are the principals in a1 animal act that always geis a big hand in Plerre. Jack is a 2 r-old veteran of the rurel mail routes and Jiggs is a fluffy dog. Jack has plodded route with Carrier A. around the L. Hegg years and no hands need jiggle his reins to help him femember his mail boxes. The equipage never starts out of a morning without Jiggs atop Jack. Every noon Hegglund r turns to the postoffice and turnc Jack and Jiggs loose to hurry home for lunch. The driverless outfit starts off at a smart pace, and in all tac years Jack has never bcen in smashup or received a traffic ticket. Pedestrians some timc: steal a ride on the mail cart a it roils along, but Jack doesn’t mind a few people hopping ofi and on and Jiggs gives them . friendly bark. “There goes Jack and Jiggs.’ say Pierre housewives along the way. “It's lunch time.” ——eo——— SAN ANTONIO, Texas, June 7 -~Prolonged applause greeted the declaration of Dr. Valeria Park er, of New. York, that the old form of the monogramatic mar- riage is the form which is going stand the test of time. He Women’s Clubs and said that he did not helieve compm\lanalo; marriage will endure. | “I am sure that bielogically and | ethically, the old form of mono-| gramatic relationship is going to| stand because it meets the needs| of human dbeings,” sald Dr. Park | er. ; ———eo——— MARTHA SOCIETY ~MEETS ‘The Martha Soclety of the Presbyterian church will meet in the chureh parlors tomorrow af ternoon, June 8, at 2:30 o'clock with Mrs, Walter, Scott and Mrs. Al requested to bring it to the meet- P SHOWS “SCHOOL DAYS” Presented by THE MERRY MAKERS Come and let us bring j ()} THE back memories of d Maid Teacher Silly Girl Bad Boy l)ainly Misses A show full of clean fun and music OH—OH—OH—LOOK sdibr, Fioar Mo, PRugENTS Note—Tuesday and Wednesday Will AMATEUR HARTER DAY BANQUET HELD BY THE LIONS Wives of Members Guests! —Rosselle Honored— Henderson Boosted 37 ¢ Covers were lajd for at the Charter Day: banquet of the| Lions Club, at the Forget-Me'Not| g Tea Room iast might at which tho wives of members were guests. B. A. Rossclle, member of the | and. deputy district governor for| Alaska, spoke of the activities of | tha club in wvarious parts of the| country and the importance such a club to a gity, in makinz the presentation -of the Juneau clfb charter. L. D. Henderson, president of the local Lions Club presided at the dinner ‘and accepted'the, char- ter on behalf of the Juneau or- ganization. George B. Rice and Allen Shat- tuck gave short talks and R. E. Rcbertson gave a toast to the women guests, which was answer- ed by Mrs. Robert Simpson. Mrs, Simpson .said that the wives of Lions fn Juneau had wondered a great deal about the Lions and hade. come to the conclusion that as cntertainers they were bears, as- «companhions they were deers (dears), though cccasionally they thought that as husbands they were hoars (bores). Mr. Rosselle was presented with a life membership plaque. to the Culver City Lions Club during the evening, which it was the privi- lege of the Juneaun Club to be- stow on behalf of the Culver City organization. Mr. Rosselle an- nounced that his term of’ office as deputy district governor for Alaska would end with the meet- ing last might and that L. D. Hen- derson -had been delegated to suc- ceed him by Dr. W. B. Wells of Riverside, Cal.,, Governor of Lions international for the. fourth dis- triet of which Alaska is a part. In acknowledging the honor, Mr. Henderson declared, that he appreclated - it tremendously and would .strive to fulfill his duties in encouraging the establishment of other Lions Clubs in the Terri- tory and advancing the work of the club. Music during the evening was furnished by Earl Hunter and William Vale. Florida’s Uninstructed Delegation Anti-Smith Accarding to Returns| . JACKSONVILLE, Fia.,, June 7— Mors than threefourths of the votes counted” indicated. that Flor ida’sw aninstrueted delegation to Democratic national conven- tion. at. Houston, Texas, will be anti-Smith, . in . scntiment. Supe porters of Smith are running be- hind dn practically all districts, also In the.race for dblegate-at- large. Doyle ‘Carlton, -Tampa attorney, ng in the field of five for ernatorial nomination. of is the @ £y ——————— ROY LUNN IN HOSPITAL e 0. ,who is part owner of & machine shop, entered St. Ann's Rospital yesterdiy with a “eold. — Je NIGHTS i Al e Manages Campaign ; : Mr. James W. Good of Washington, D: €, who has: been active , recently in the campaign for Secretary of Commerce Mr: Herbert Foov- er, is announced as manager of Hoover's assault on the Republican Presidential nom- ination. WILLIAM Benatl eomen~ g horcs~ e and Tl MADGE BELLAMY (CHARLES MORTON -J. FARRELL MACDONALD - TED MNAMARA - SAMMY COHEN -MARJORIE BEEBE vy by RANDALL M FAYE FRANK OCONNOR production FOX ARCADE CAFE WILL BE OPENED TONIGHT BY MARY YOUNG A special dinner will mark the | |opening of the newly decorated | Arcade Cafe on Front Street, of which Mary Young is proprietor, afternoon at 5 o'clock. Thre ion, the ame occupied by Arcade Cafe before Miss Young left Juneau for the south | last year, has been leased by her | | from W. G. Hellan, to whom she| sold it at the time of her de- parture. The interior hes been entirely redecorated with a cclor scheme of grey and cream and has twelve comfortable boxes. There are two counters, one, at the soda fountain with seven .seats and the other a long solid mo- hogany counter which will ac- commodate fifteen people, The scda fountain which was former- ly in Hellan's pharmacy, is thor- | {oughly equipped with frigidaire. The cafe has two rest rooms for the convenience of patrons. In the kitchen there are shiny new steam tables, ample.storage {space, a capacious stove and all modern equipment, ! The cafe will be open from 6 o'clock in the morning until 2a. m. from ncw on, Miss Young ) deglared and will make every ef-1 fort to cater to the tastes of its 1 patrons. | day | Ingly just inside the store. Her force consists of cooks, two dishwashers and waitresses. —— e GEORGE BROTHERS HAVE NEW DRINKING FOUNTAIN For the convenience of :usto- mers a new china drinking. foun- tain was installed at. the Ceorge Brothers grocery company yester: by John Newman, in their store on Front Street. The foun- tain is the latest thing in eguip- ment, made of twice tired white vitreous china, and stands mvit- They second largn in the store, im perishable stock two five will soon install a frigidaire case which to keep cold and fresh. GEO. ANDERSO)] Pmnnh 't%- | We call and deliver PHONE 143 | Anderson Music Shopps Brunswick Bowling Alleys for men and women Stand—Miller's Taxi Phone 218 2 ARCHITECT, playsia part- A nicety of “Civic Pride” is to build a beautiful home. Architecture has materially changed in the past ten years— even the very smallest homes are desi with rare skill—even the most inexpensive houses can have graceful lines. The architect is versed in such methods and can\be greatest possible assistance. His professional indispensable. of the knowledge is quite . It isn't enough nowadays to merely gay: “Build a home"—it must be a modern house architecturally and one which adapts itself to the character of your epecific community. Morris Construction Co. — BUILDERS—— SAND and |GRAVEL nd Per