The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 5, 1929, Page 3

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numimu'nuiumu]ifimumimlmm PlCKETT‘ TON IGHT WILLI \M I)L\’\IOND “RED CLA Y72, International News and Com- “George edy Comes Humc Coming Thursday RICHARD BARTHELM “ouT OF THE RUINS” One of the Best Roles Barthelmess has ever played, says eritics TR AROCOOO o Attractions At Theatres l PALACE b"L\hcn \h” world is really At le races ot the greatest drama of all. 50 declares William Desmond refer- 5t ring to the picture in which this theme is used to develop a gigant situation which, the star bel is the most remarkable he has ever been called upon to relate on the screen. This is y “Red Cl which has d a nation-wi controversy, and which is v at the Palace. It is a story of the modern American Indian. Desmond plays the role of a hereditary chief —a college bred man, football hero and war celebrity, who, although he is everything a man could ask to be, still is barred .by the wall of custom from claimi the love of the girl he ador and who loves him—because she is white and he is red. NOwW i SHOWING, COLISEUM [ - ol “Four Sons,” Fox's screen sion of Miss I. A. R. Wylie's stor; “Grandma Bernle Learns Her Let- . ters,” holds the screen at the Coli- seum. It opened last night and proved that all the high praise showered upon it in New Yorw and other cities was not misplaced. “Four Sons” is entitled to its clas- sification as a masterpiece. It is crowded with all the elements that go toward making up superb screen ' entertalnmcnt - G e | “FOUR SONS,” the | It tells of a motk r one son With V, (’,‘.ccp( ground. Ratl a mother her sttugg jtold with and dramatic effect. s and her honesty " DICK BARTHELMESS COMING TO PALACE “Out of the Ruins” w in Burbank, Calif., was turned temporarily into a ba lements hine-gun G. H. Q. and all the attendant tures of.the recent conflict. Richard Barthelmess, the appears seur lieutenant. Nixon is the leading 1 “Out of the Ruins” comes to tk Palace Thursd; arouse the patrons, the brill formance. because o ncy of Barthelmess' pe: BESIPREITEE marriage to Maurice Cleary, L | Angeles banker. .Marital venture. B o WANTED Alaska. July, August, September. CALL FOR BIDS Transportation and foed furnished. Experienee not necessary. Apply|. Bids will be received at the of- chry Klapisch, Gastineau Hotel. |fice of the Commissioner of Edu- —adv. | TR RO A O half the time. Cash UL IR L R LI LLR LD CE U T T LT T UL b s A Successful Garden Calls for the right tools. They make your work easier and pleasanter, and you deo it in We have everything you need— for a small or large garden HARRI Store 221 LOWER FRONT STREET nn||||mml||numumnmmmmmlmmmmmmmm abiding faith in her four sons and in the world. n off-screen back- it is the tale of the sons leave behind, heartaches. and simplicity at all times with the utmost Included in the cast are Margaret ; Earle Foxe and | preduced at First National Studios the big plant , barbed wire star, as a young French chas- He has a power- y and is certain to| nthusiasm of all the the drama and | May McAvoy To Wed | Associated Press Phote June 26 has been selected b)‘ May McAvoy as the date of her It will be her firs Women for Saltery at Killisnoo, the Alaska for Seattle where they UFFlclAL uF | will visit for several months. | Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Bowditch, | Their home, happy at first, is clouded with the coming of the tourists from Boston, Mass.,, were war. The old mother is torn be- BnY scnuTs southbound passengers on the| in German Alask: I y Martin, son of Mrs. Howe who has been attending Anne High School in Seat- is a northbound passenger on Northwestern. He will spend summer in Juneau with his In addition to making a ‘(.\ VISITS HERE : Assistant Scout Executive motner of Seattle Area Coun- | fire cl Is in Juneau ¢ iy | Ronala R. Ruddiman, Assistant the attle Indians. Scout Executive of the Seattle Area' N\ Alvina Petrich, who has Council, Boy Scouts of America, is been teaching at Hoonah during the Mann, p! ng the mother; James Hall, Cha Morton, George Meek- | visiting in Juneau and Friday at last year, is a southbound passen- er and F is X. Bushman, Jr.,|hoon he will meet with the Juneau ger on the Alaska. She is the sis- son of the celebrated screen star,|Bcout Council and others interested ter of T. J. Petrich, who is in the {in the boys' | |luncheon organization at & U. 8. Customs office here, and is the Arcade Cafe and on her way to her home in Wash- | lain his mission to Alaska at i on to spend the summer. time. g Miss Enid Marsh, daughter of Mr. Ruddiman has visited the Mr and Mrs. W. S. Marsh, of An- i|Boy Scouts at Ketchikan and Pet- chorage and a graduate of the |ersburg and after attending to his gigh School there, is enroute on the | “fl‘ ness college there. . Ruddiman is trying to inter-| Mr. t- }ost Aln:;kn Scout organizations to |join the Seattle Area, explaining |the manifold advantages of such year, are passengers 021 the |a move, with officials visiting Ju-|Alaska for Seattle enroute to Los neau and laying out work and giv- Angeles where they will make their ing special instructions, elaborating P°me. Mr. Chick has been em- on the present work. These offic- Ploved as driller at Chickaloon on |ials will instruct the scoutmasters ©il Prospecting work. Miss L. Tolbert, a teacher in the ful dramatic role, one of his best, |\l DeW duties, etc. This is the %6 ‘{5 ‘o John qnc; D:::-purm;sn of his present visit and Seward High School, is an Alaska o il it \ protty |TUll explanation will be made at Passenger for Seattle. She is going on- ¢ he film, and pret to spend the summer with her mother and will return to Seward next Fall. Mrs. L. E. Rockafeller, wife of the Superintendent of the Evan Jones Coal Company, at Matanuska, is enroute on the Alaska to Seattle to spend several months. M. C. Debbon, pharmacist for the |the luncheon Friday noon. | Mr. Ruddiman has visited the |Scout Camp at Eagle River and was a most interested guest. He |stated the cabin was a splendid structure and the surrounding area |most ideal for Scout work. He made many suggestions which will i ase the yearly intercst in the mp with something new every year. s Mr. Ruddiman stated the Seattle Scouts now number 4,000 and each vear Scouts are taken to the canp r- past year, is enroute on the Alas- ka to Seattle and will proceed to his old home at Portland, Ore. Mrs. J. P. Williams and son Dean rvmrd on the Queen Anne baseball team, Buddy was one of e high school students who was ted to go out to practice with | |business in Juneau, will go to Skag-| Alaska to Seattle. to enter & busi- ' and Mrs. L. W. Click, whoI have resided at Chickaloon for the | Anchorage Drug Company for the| are passengers on the Princess [Louise for Seattle. They will spend the summer on a ranch in Wash- ington State. On her first trip to the States in |26 yea Mrs. M. Morgan, Fair- banks, is an Alaska passenger for Seattle She is accompanied by |her daughter, Eleanor, born in | Fairbanks, and making her first trip to the Outside. Mrs. M. L. Merritt and three! 'children left on-the Princess Louise for Vancouver. They arc enroute to Towa to spend the summer visit- ing relatives. L e gl | LEAVE ON AMERICA FIRST nlmmmlmummunmmmunnuummmnm||tmmfl|mln|mtmmtmlummmmmnuumimmmmfl | Among the passengers leaving on ‘,the America First, Capt. John Haho, this morning, when it left for its |regular run to Petersburg and way |ports, were Dave Housel and W. L. | Bell, mining engineer from Vancou- ver. They will be gone for severnli days looking over miining proper- | ties, MISS JEANNE ROBBINS RESIGNS FROM STAFF OF ST. ANN'S HOSPITAL Miss Jeanne Robpins, nurse, who has been at St. Ann’s’ Hospital for several years, has resigned her po- sition at the hospital. She will |spend a month at the Taku River Camp of Dr. De Vighne's and later in the summer will go to Banff, British Columbia, for two months, before returning to Alaska. Her place at the hospital has been tak- en by Miss J. Morris, a graduate of St. Joseph's Hospital, Victoria, B. C. | - e | TWO BOATS BRING HALIBUT | The Fane, Capt. Ole Johansen, krought in 2200 pounds of halibut this morning and the Fort, Capt. Ole Brinsdale, brought in 8500 pounds, all of which was bought by the New England Fish Company ‘for 11% and 8. on Hood Canal, 200 in a bunch for two weeks outing and instruc- | tion. superintendent of th. Latouche cop- per mine, and their two children §/ David :mz! Gene are passengers on f§| the Alaska for Seattle where they || will visit several months. Called to Seattle by the illness of relatives, Mrs. Louise Laven- hagen, Ohpir resident, made the trip to Anchorage by plane and ar- rived at Seward to make connection with the steamer Alaska, on which she is a passenger. Enroute to New England for a | visit at her old home, Mrs. W. B, Phinn, wife of a prominent Cor- j| dova business man, is a passenger || on the Alaska for Seattle. She |/ will go east via the Panama Canal. Mrs. Julia B. Dahlager, wife of the foreman of the Cordova Times mechanical department, and their two children Evelyn and Richard, are passengers on the Alaska to spend several months visiting rela- §| tives in Seattle and Vancouver. | Mrs. D. B. Femmer and her § small daughter, Margaret, left on KODIAK SCHOOL BUILDING of cation, Juneau, Alaska, until Wed- nésday noon, June 19, 1929, cover- ing the construction, heating work, plumbing work, and electrie wiring of a four-room frame school build- ng to be erected at Kodiak, Al- ska. Plans and specifications may be examined at the office of the Commissioner of Education, where forms for uce in submitting bids also may be obtained. The right to reject any or all bids is reserved. LESTER D. HENDERSON, Commissioner of Education. Rhodes KRISS KROSS RAZORS—$6.00 Guarantecd 10 years against mechanical defects Phone 25 Free Delivery A Large Collection of Imported Rugs Tuesday and Wednesday ? : At | VALENTINE’S Jewelry Store New Arrivals Ladies’ Slippers Made of CTTTTH T T TTO On Sale At e T T T A e T T T T T T L = IflIIllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIluI i JM. AT AT AN Announcing Goat’s Milk Ice Cream PURE FRESH, WHOLESOME CREAM, FRESH MILK AND EGGS o4t Juneau Ice Cream Parlors Saloum [T ummummeng | glllllIlIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIII||II|IIIIIHIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII“IIIIIIIIIIIHI TONIGHT TONIGHT 7:30—9:25 7:30—9:25 ‘Four Sons” Big as the Heart of Humanity “What Price Glory” was the story of the soldiers who went marching off to war. “Four Sons” is the story of the mother the soldiers left behind. Mother love—Brotherly love— And the love of youthful sweethearts— All three are woven into the story of “Four Sons” THE GREATEST HUMAN INTEREST STORY EVER TOLD WITH Margaret Mann, the sixty year old screen find, surrounded by a cast of youthful and talented screen players. PRICES---10, 20, 50, Loges 60 cents ||l|||||||||||||Ill||||l||ll|||ll"llflll|IIIIII!lllll||||||Illlll|lllllll"H|Illllflllflllllll"mfl“mlfllllIH"'“"l'!h""""l“u ,muummuummmnmuwuuwmmmmnmmwmumummmfi Pete . ays: “If you are Webfoot — EAT Hood River STRAWBERRIES at 20c Bas- ket—FRESH—Arrived Today.” “WHY PAY MORE” W » PHONE 4386 Personal Delivery Service Extra Specials GOOSERERRIES, per pound ... $ .15 ROYAL ANNE CHERRIES, per pound ............ccccoooereeces .30 3 BING CHERRIES, per pound ... 30 ROCKY FORD MELONS, each 15¢, 20c and .25 3 bunches FRENCH BREAKFAST RADISHES and 3 bunches GREEN ONIONS—all for . . ... : RAISE YOUR OWN VEGETABLES AND PUT ME OUT OF BUSINESS Cabbage Plants, Cauliflower Plants, Head Lettuce Plants, Tomato Plants, Onion Sets. Only vanetles chosen that are proven in this country. 25 F ruits Fruits ORANGES, 9 dozen for .. T'LORIDA GRAPEFRUIT, each .....cccooocoiiiiiciicincnnn .10 FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT, each ................................. 15 CANTALOUPES, Rocky Fords 20 CANTALOUPES, Rocky Fords 25 CHERRIES, Ruby Reds, pound 35 (:OLDEN FLECKED FULL RIPE BANANAS, 2 lbs. f(lr 25 Vegetables That Are Fresh at Prices That You Cannot Overlook YAKIMA NO, 1 POTATOES, 32 pounds for HAINES ALASKA POTATOES, 32 pounds for . KILN DRIED ONIONS, 4 pounds for . NICE SOLID TOMATOES, pound . WASHINGTON SPINACH, pound GOLDEN CARROTS, bunch, each CRISP BLANCHED CELERY, bunch NEW POTATOES, 3 pounds for ... BERMUDA APPLE ONIONS, pound . NEW WASHINGTON HEAD LETTUCE, CAULIFLOWER, GREEN PEPPERS and HOT HOUSE TOMATOES BUTTER, EGGS, HAMS AND BACON AT STARTLING CASH PRICES Seattle Fruit & Prod’ui;e

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