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PICKETT® PALACE S TUESDAY WEDNESDA M. (,. M SP()TLI(‘HTS FROM SATIJRDAY PVP NIN(. PO MATT MOORE and EDITH ROBERTS A Universal Jewel Picture L) bTORY and the NEWLYWEDS with SNOOKUMS Comedy ACLO‘VIPANIFI) BY THI‘ I’ALLII)A'I()N]" Children 10c, Adults 40¢, Youths 25¢, Loges 500 Attraciions At Theatres | “WHITE FLANNELS" | COLISEUM TONIGHT b - A . Life in the coal fields of Penn- sylvania is. portrayed with thril ling vividness in “White Flannels the Warner Bros. production fea- turing Louise Dresser and Jason Robarts, The Broska family lives in pov- erty, the father and son working in the mines, and the mother do- ing odd jobs for rich mine owners and saving. every hard-earned pen- ny to send her son to college Pather Broska objects, but when e is killed in the mines, the moth- ar urges the son with such vehe- mence that he Jeaves the village girl whom he loves and goes away to-get an education. The mother is admirably played by Louise Dresser, the son by Ja- son Robarts and the father by George Nichols. Virginia Browne Faire 1is also featured, as tha sweetheart of the hero, who, be. Meving herself forgotten by him, becomes engaged to his pal, played by Warner Richmond. | “THE MYSTERY CLUB” | = AT PALACE TONIGHT LTRSS : Ireland, England, Australia, Rus- sia, Huyngary, ¥rance, Denmark and the United States are repre- sented at the Palace theatre to- night and Wednesday, where the Universal-Jewel, “The Mystery €lub," is the feature attraction. Each of the cast represents the highest type from his respective country. In addition, when one stops to consider that the picture is a screen adaptation of “Crimes of the Armchair Club,” by Arthur Somers Roche, perfect entertain. sment is assured. The cast con- sists of Matt Moore, "Mildred Har- , Edith Roberts, Charles Lane, arner Oland, Henry Herbert. Charles Puffy ,Alphonse Martell, Pinch Smiles, Earl Metcalfe, Nat Carr, Jed Prouty, Alfred Allen, Sidney Bracey and Monte Monta. i — gue. The ban is off on children at- ténding theatres and they wiil have their first- opportunity of| hearing - the Paliedatone. 3 T —e B T; NEW SCREEN STAR IS | { COMING- TO COLISEUM | j'A new screen leading woman appears. opposite Jack Holt in “Rorlorn River,” Paramount’s stir- ring picturisation of Zane Grey's adventure:thriller of the cattle country, at the Coliseum Thurs- 'wflhc is Arlette Marchal, the sen. sational French Beauty, who first agtracted. the attention of Ameri- can, moviegoers through her por- trayal of Napoleon’s sister in Glor- ia. Swanson’s . “Madame Sans Gene,” which was filmed in Paris. e )Am.lGAl LEGION AUXILIARY v mn vm-m a special meet-, ing of the American Legion Aux- iliray Wednesday, Sept. 5, p. m., at the Dugout, The pur- pose is to choese a delegate for the Convention at Ketchikan and LET Almquist Press Your Suit. to pass upon important business.We call and deliver. Phone 528. All .QIbm are urged to bel —ad at the Coliseum tonight.| BYE CONCERT IS ARTISTIC EVENT The concert given by Erik Bye at the Palace theatre last night to a large audience was a night of song, given by an artist in six different languages from as many masters. Each number was round- y applauded, showing apprecia- tion for the masterly manner in which selections were given by this marvelous baritone-tenor con- cert master. Opening with the difficult se- lection - “Alucevanle stelle”—aria ly acclaimed [(-en singer, went through a five- from La Tosca, this international- operatic and con- part program of thirteen selec- tions and ended with giving six folk songs, two Swedish, two Dan- ish ‘and three Norwegian. the audience still remained seat- ed and Mr. Bye responded with three extra numbers, including “Take Me Back to Old Virginny,” given perhaps with more feeling than any one in the audience has heard before. Mrs. Howe Vance, accompanist was twice thanked from the stage by Mr. Bye and she was given a seperate ovation at. the.conclusion of the concert for her masterful instrumentation. The concert started at 8 o'clock and without any unnecessary in- termissions concluded at 9:15 o’clock. It is needless to say that it ever Mr. Bye returns to Juneau, he will have an audience that will pack the largest audi- torium in this city. ENGINEER ELA FINISHES SPEEL RIVER SURVEYS Engineer A. J. Ela, employed by the Cameron and Zellerbach pulp and paper interests, has finished surveys of power development possibilties at Long and Orater Lakes, and is now engaged on surveying probable routes for transmission lines from the Speel River section to Gastineau Chan- lwhn arrived on the mail boat Sun- at 8|James Galen and two'steerage for nel, according to J. H. Cameron, day. Mr. Ela will probably fin- ish the surveys for the transmis- sion lines before the end of the season, according to Mr. Cameron. Mr. Cameron will return to Speel| River tomorrow, ADMIRAL WATSON IN - SATURDAY; WEST Steamer Admln! Wntson. (‘npt C. C. Graham, arrived, in port from the south at 8 o'clock .Saturday. levening with the following pas.| sengers for Juneau: Miss Alma Olson, Burgh, Mrs. N. Nédson, Mrs. Joe Baines, Wilfred Baines 'and two steerage, Before leaving for the’ westward| In midnight she loaded 700 mail| imnd ties at the Juneau Lumber Mills for the Alaska Railroad. Passengers leaving here, were: E. M. Axelson, T. M. Italio, An. mie Dick, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dick and three children for Yaku- tat; one steerage for Cordova; Mrs. Seward; .one steerage for Kodiak.| —l —l old papers for saie at the Empire. Then{¥ Miss B. D, = UNALGA"DANCE. | ON TOMORROW Complimentary Affair Is‘ Given to Citizens [ « of Juneau i The officers and nembers of the crew of the U, Unalga, | Coast Guard vessel i bases | here, have invited the people of | Juncan to their: third annual| complimentary ball to be given | at the A. B. Hall tomorrow night, { The annual affair of the officers and men of the Unalga has been, | since , its ineeption, the most| looked forward #o. dance of the vear in Juneau, as the perionnel of the. Coast Guard vessel have| proved themselves, perfect hosts The Unalga dance has always drawn out a large crowd in years | gone by, and it indicated that | tomorrew night will see most of | the population of Juneau, from the sub-debs to their grandpar- ents, going by foot or by car, bound for the A. B. Hall The Moonlight Serenaders will lend their harmeny to make it an .-u,uuhlo evening. B COLORADO SPRUCE IS CUT FOR PAPER DENVER, Sept. 4.—Paper man- ufacturers, after pushing to the far corners of North America in quest of timber to convert into newsprint and stationery, now look to Colorado as a new source of their raw material. The spruce on the western slope of the Rocky Mountains has grown | so tall it must be thinned out. The United Sates forestry service has given a lumber company a four- year contract to cut and haul out of the Mount Wilson district 120.. 000 cords of spruce. Felling of trees will begin in Septembor. One of the few narrow-g railroads in the United States will haul the timber to Montrose, Colo., where it will be . loaded on a broad-guage line for shipment to paper mills at Combined. Locks Wis. The logs will measure not more than eight feet in length when they arrive at the mills. The narrow guage flat cars, drawn by a little engine around sharp mountain curves and up step grades, will not accommodate longer logs The forestry service points out that Colorado has several billion feet of timber available for paper making, and that by a process of felling trees in “working circles,” much as a farmer rotates, crops, the spruce supply in the national forests of this state will not be di- minished. t ge Mme. Nungesser Note ** In Lindbergh " Display ST. LOUIS, Sept. 4.—An auto- graphed message in a blue and gold embossed -book, written by the mother of Charles Nungesser, French flier who was lost attempt- ing to fly to the United States, has been added to the Col. Charles A. Lindbergh collection of gifts at the Jetferson Memarial here. The bhook had been given to the mother of the American flier, wh3 presented it, together with an an. tique candelabrum given her in Mexico, to the collection, The cai. delabrum is representative of the art of old Mexican silversmiths. Two, elaborately bound and il luminated antique volumes were given to the collection by H, B. Stebler, of Berne, Switzerland, Peat B}m of ‘Jreland Mly Now Yield Alcohol DLFLI\' Svplv 4~lrel‘uul rich in bogs, and there have )uwu many projects for developing them for the production of fuel for loco- motion and manufacturers. A possible new source of profit from them is indicated by a mo- tion in the senate which urged the government to allocate a grant of $10,000 to enable experts to carry out trials demonstrating the net cost of producing crude alcohol I MWHMIWMWHIMWWMIWW from peat and ascertain the possi. bility of doing so at a price which will enable it to compete with petrol. ———.——— FOR SALE FUKNITURE, FIXTURES, STOCK AND GOOD-WILL of RHODES CAFE, also known as ' GASTINEAU CAFE. (Accounts. Recelvable Not Included ) N Refrigerating Plant. Leage: monthly rent, $125 Fine Location in Gastineau Hotel.’ The Restaurant that all Legis-}; lators Patronize-—1929 Legisla- Unusual Opportunity to Open for: Business Before Annual Fair. Sealed bids will be received by| yndersigned until 10 o’clock & m., September 12, 28. Right reserved to reject army or all bids. (‘apy of inventory cdp be obtain- . ed. upon .request. R. E. Robertson as assignee for| benefit of creditors of B. F. and Christie Rhodes. 200 Seward | Building, Juneau, Alaska. ture is only a few months away.: vangeline, of Acd&la, Has to Longfellow who asked Hawthorne 1 he intended to use it. Hawthorne sald 0, whereupon Longfellow wrote “Evangeline.” Today, thousands of people from, all parts of the United States and Canada make s pligrimage to Evan- geline Memorial Park, at Grand Pre, opposite the station of the Dominion Atlantic Rallway, see Evangeline's Well, the anclent Acadian willows, the cross over the Acadian graves, the pathetic statue of Evangeline 1in bronze by Hebert, an Acadian sculp- tor of genius, and the beautiful me- Years ago Longfellow wrote his classic poem “Evangellne” based on the expulsion: of the Acadlans from Acadia, New France, which 1s now the plcturesque province of Nova Scotla. There was an Acadfan maiden, named Evangelipe by Lobg- fellow. who was separated from her lover and who searched for him alohg the Atlantic coast towns and el and finally found him dying 4n Philadelphia z}o-mm. Faithful unto death. Evangeline made a strong ap- peal to the poet's fancy, The story was first told to Hawthorn d later EVANGEL INE MEMORIAL PARK. GRAND PRE’ morial chapel bullt by descendants | of the expatrfated Acadians In the park. Inside the chapel 1s & Carrere | marble statue of the Virgin Mary which cost 85.000. The park, devel- oped by John Frederic Herbin. the only Acadian who ever returned Grand Pre and George Graham. of FlNE ESCAI’EMENT IN' BRISTOL |||u|||mmnmuuuuuummmmfi NEW SHOW was mot only a pack of salmow Jn the ¥ ol Bay W0 seuson ju TONIGHT and > wits a fine escape- | WEDNESDAY declared Denn v e U COLISEUM es, who returned IR the DBristol 1y ¥ . t had been A I made a trip througl 1 umna and Lake Clark count inspec the pawning bed and Ul indications showed tha scapement had been mora than leaua Mr. Winn sald i pack in th T tol Ba re va 1164 ¢ though I think that it will run sligatly |over that when the final totais| {come in,” Mr. Winn said > the Dominion Atlantic, 1s one of the | | beauty spots of Nova Scotia. “The Land of Evangeline,” Nova Scotia, long at the doorway of Bos- ton, almost, 1s now but 26 hours by sea from New York. Evangeline first had an immortal poem pamed after her. Now a majestic steamship not only bears her name but bears thou- sands from New York to Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, on thelr way to_the lit- erary shrine at Grand Pre. Many o: them stop at Dighy: others visit An- napolis Royal's quaint old fort and museum In the former Port Royai founded in- 1604 by-the great Cham- plain four yeprs before Quebec: still athers tour the picturesque Annapo- lis Valley to Kentville, Woltville, Grand Pre and Halifax, guardian of the Northern gate to the Dominion of Canada, But few pass through Grand Pre without stopping—Grand Pre, on the Basin of Minas, home ot Evangeline, MARRIED LAST NIGHT ;\«.miml a bouquet of sweet peas and rose buds. Many bowls of| AT QUIET CEREMONY,“n..”..l dahlias decorated the liv- lum room and dining room, where | Seattle. | dinner was served after the wed- Beuhal Burgh, of the bride of Ernest Kir-|ding well known merchant of | nr Rirberger is very talented Kake, at a quiet ceremany at the | mygically, and studied singing un- home of Judge and Mrs. V. A|qox Guisppe Inerillo, of tha Paine at 8 o'clock last evening. T“"lvulua Opera company for some Rev. 0. A. Stillman officiated at | (e r. and Mrs. Kirbergor the ceremony and Judge and Mrs.|if jeave this evening on the Vir- Miss became berger, Paing attended the couple.. Tae|ginjy |, for Kake where they will bride was charming in a shell-| . vo their homo. pink beaded georgette gown, and | THE OPENING OF TODA Y--Tuesd ay With a Full Line of ARTICLES, CIGARS, CONFECTIONERY F resh Daily : occupied by The Timperial CHARLIE MILLER Prop. Announcement CHARLIE MILLER ANNOUNCES * The New Pioneer : Sept dth CIGARETTES, CANDY ICE' CREAM AND Popcom-and Peanuts The New Pioneer Next to Cohseum in building formerly Pool- -Billiards-Pocket Bdharda WIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW HMMWMIIHIIFW%WHIM FINED FOR VIOLATING ALASKA GAME LAWS Frank Magon, who was arrest. ed and charged with having veni son in his posgession in the closod season in violation of the Alaska Game Laws, iwas fined $15 costs by Judge F, A U. 8. Commigsioner's Court this morning. The “gase of Harry Sum.- dum, who wagigrrested on a simi- lar charge, was continued for 30 days. and | Boyle of the| “'llIIIIlllllllIIlllIIllllH“llllmlum“ll"llllllllljIII|I||I|I||II1III|III|||IIIIIIIIIIIII|IIlllllllllllllltrlvllllllljl‘l,lllllIIlIIllllllIL'l:‘ r .\."M,M—&W ..mmumlmmmmnmmmmnmmmmmmummmmmmmmuuummmmmmuuummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmnmmmmmnmmlmmmnnnm REDLINGSHAFER AT SITKA H. L. Redlingshafer scal agent for the U. 8. Forest Service of. 1 here, left on the Alameda f Sitka to procure informat ml\ re- | quested by the Feder ‘\1 wer | and }4\\'4! company ”‘““ Jas&nflobards DBireeted by ! u.ovo BACON YOU BE THE JUDGE Let us fill your bin DIAMOND Prl(u% 1() 20 40-Loges 50c BRIQUETS COMING THURSDAY then “FORLORN RIVER” YOU BE THE JUDGE lIllIIIIIlIIIlIIIlI|IIIIIIIIImlllllllfllllllll We know you will find them to be clean, econ omical and nice to handle in furnace, range, heater or fireplace grate. TONIGHT Last Free Lecture EVALYN DAVIS “The Magnetism cf the Fluman Voi -Reading Character Class in Body Building, Youth, Health, Concentration, Memory ‘Fraining, Mental Mastery com- Your dealer sells them or phone | PACIFIC COAST | COAL CO: mences Wednesday Night. 3 8 0] 9 Dusiness anl Professional PHONE 412 Woman's Club, Methodist Church. 5 P. M. P ] C. D. Ferguson, Agent WHY NOT LET US ' put your name on our coal lll(‘. {¢ is certaluly good coal. We deliver fresh dressed poultry eevry day. Our egss are the largest and . freshest that the hens produce. & Wea carry a complete line of V Poultry and Fox Feeds. And our transfer service— well you can't, beat it. D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 7 B e e—— e THE ARCADE CAFE Special Dinners on Sundays and Week Days Soda Fouuntain ineonmection. Come in and listen to:the radio. MARY YOUNGH, Prop. PHONE 288 MERCHANTS CAFE : Thos.” McMullén, Prop. JUNEAU'S NEWEST PLACE TO EAT Open 6 a. m. to 8 p. m. \ SHORT ORDERS—REGULAR DINNERS Next Connors Motor Co. oo ey A F ire Insurance Polwy may not be changed after a fire occurs. Se, if ‘you have paid off a mortgage or finished purchasing property under contract,” yot should netify us. . b We will make the necessary change without cost. If you move to a new location, an en- dorsement is required. If you need more insurance, phone us. We will cover you immediately. ALLEN SHATTUCK, Ine. INSURANCE—REAL ESTATE FRANKLIN POOL HALL Lower Front St. = Phone 214 H. B. Polson, h‘l CIGARS, CIGARETTES, CANDY, © SOFT DRINKS, PQOL TABLES e,