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THURSDAY—FRIDAY Ancther Miracle Picture by the Creater of “TRADER HORN” “of the jungle— % the strang- 7 est of romances o o9 unfold N before your ‘ ]‘\ very eyes! Primitive Iove! Fights with lions, giant apes, wild Afri- can natives! Unbelieyable thrills! A modern Adam and Eve ro- mance in wildest Africa! % directed by W. S. VAN DYKE with' JOHNNY WEISSMULLER NEIL HAMILTON C. AUBREY SMITH MAUREEN O'SULLIVAN ~—SILVER NITE— DOORS THAT FIT. WELL and Open Easilyl ’I'HB beauty of our doors will delight you immediately, they fit so well and open and doumeanlydut u_enjoy lasting satisfaction. So econom- ical, too. Doors that are pre- nael made of dependable se- Iected stiles and rails, three-ply laminated waterproof panels. Tosnlivnill™ $2.52 o bk &2 = 2.66 IEETEAEAE 500 Anytypeofdooflhu need from anch Doon ln Cugboud Store lnp w is yours for d'u asking. I'H NN AL i \H'\|H : DONALDINE BEAUTY PARLORS Telephons 4%~ RUTH HAYES CARL JACOBSON | JEWELER WATCH REPAIRING SEWARD STREET Opposite Goldstetn ‘Building | . ] { JUNEAU SAMPLE | SHOP | The Litile Store with the BIG VALUES - L oo SRS ~ UPHOLSTERING | MADE TO ORDER | Also Recoverinng and | Repairing & | Dishaw Bldg. PHONE 419 : . WE HAVE IT | at the Right Price Harris Hardware €eo. Lower Front Street - | L '] DANCING .. ; TELEPHONE 5451 L o i g Archeologists have uncovered an ancient burial ground above a still more ancient cemefiery.i;'mu Ox- nard, Cal, taking lIfi Ikehwns from it, SR B Dorothy Stearns Roff Teacher of ¥ CAPITOL e |build at Taku.. Both Theatres Present New Attmctzons Tomght RPSCHBE | Dove Star in De- lightful‘Farce “Cock of the Air,” starring Ches- ter Morris and Billie Dove, will be prezented at the Capitol' theatre lin the near. future. g ‘The story an original, concerns the exciting love-match between the romantic “ace”:ot:the ‘Ameri- can air service, played by Mortis, and the “toast of Paris” énactéd by Miss Dove. The complications which ensue when the “master” and “mistress” "of " romance meet on common ground form the ba- sis of an amazing and Thighly spiced tale of 'love and adventure in a World War background. “Cock ‘of the' ‘Air” is strictly a farce. It is packed with laughs, and has lavish “settings.. It is a Howard Hughes produc- CHAMBER HE ARS OF DRIVES FOR SWEET CHARITY Central Rellef Red Cross Roll Call, Old Clothes Day Dlscussed (Continuea mrum rage Gne) every citizen to vote,” he declared. “I am not telling you how to vote, lbut just appealing to you to do £0.” He peinted out that a light vote | was inconclusjve and generally un- satisfactory wheréas a heavy vote was proof of the interest of all the people in their government. College Is Praised The Alaska College and School of Mines is “certainly a credit to the Territory,” asserted ¥. P. Ul- rich of the Unilted States Coast and Geodetic Survey, who re- sided in.a dormitory there for several weeks last summer while he was engaged in erecting the polar year station on the campus. “They are honest to goodness men and boys. . . of the type that we want to, remain in the Territory,” he said. The most extensive geographical inyestigations ever Indertaken: any- where are now being conducted at the polar year station at the col- ber. The buildings of the sfation as well as the eqmpment used are most unique. he isn’t a resident of Junean, he is. a taxpayer' and.interested in the town's well-being, ‘He praised the Juneau schools as Weing the best he had even seen. Mr. TUu- rich resides in Sitka where bhe is in ¢harge of the Coast and Geo- detic Survey station. Auncted by Prosperity Juneau’s present prosperity and its . bright future mmook for growth were the lttmfllons that cenzed Dr. R. G. Willlams 10 move ‘here from Skagway to open den- tal’ offices, he told the Charber. ‘He expected, he added, to aid in any way he can in . promoting. the Itcm"s growth. J.c . Juneau-born man whohums&dedmlmmfiesim several years, sald he was glad to get back “home.” @ don't like it in the south,” he addéd, He s a son of Mrs. Max Smith, ploneer resident of Skhgway. * Taku Cannery Plans Plans “for reébuflding: e Libby cannery at Taku Inlet are indef- inite at this A3 the matfer will not be m oynfir until the Mfi sometine in near e, Chamber was_infotmed by D.W. ‘Branch, northwest. manager f Libby, McNeill & Libby, with mfi" quarters af_Seattle. 3 |He said his own belief cwntwdny the eompany. Hbwever, conditions Mmhtfib wal- mon canning 'indtistry, it is"possi- WILL BE SHOWN| F IN NEAR FUTURE| Chester Moms and Bllhe adventure ' by Edgar - Rice Bur- | lege, Mr. Ulrich told the ©ham- | Mr. ©lrich pointed out that while ‘Tarzan, the Ape Man,” on the hair-rafsing story of jungle | roughs, will be ‘the atiraction at the Capitdl theatre tonlgm. Johnny Welssmuller world's charmpion swinimer ~plays the ‘title | role of the strange white man who | livés in the jufigle lke the apes. | Prominent roles are also played by | Neil, Hamilton, Maureen O'Sulli- | van, C. Aubrey, Smith, Doris Lioyd, Forrester H.s.rvey ‘ang Tvery Wil nams. The picture was' directed by W. S. Van Dyke. ‘The story, laid for the most part in the beast-infested Lake Alberta region of Aftica, concerns the at- tempt of a handful of English ad- venturers to find the mysterious "Eléphant’s Burial Ground” where they hope to secure a fortune’ m ‘00CK: OF THE MR’ Tarzan the Ape Maw’ W hich eatures Program at Capitol Abounds i in Jungle Dangers based (ivory, The daughter of the leader | of the safari is abducted by Tar-| zan, ‘the Apé ‘Mari, Wwho lfts her bodily from’ thé grotind’ and then | ¢arries het away béyond reach of human' hdnds'by swinging ‘through | the ‘tops of trees at dizzying height. Exciting and Thrilling Their contmulmy exciting and oftimes thrfllmg adventures with wild beasts, pygmies” and other jun- gle terrors make this a picture of unusual interest. Among" the ‘breath-taking events . are ‘the aftack upon the safarl night ‘camp by starved lons; ape,; dedth in 4 maneating gorilla pit. Bmil Liskey of Akiak was drown- [ e 'when the boat in which he was hunting ducks swamped in the Kuskokwim River half’ a mile ab- ove ' Akiak. Four other hunters in the craft managed to reach shorg, To pupils in, the Indian . school at Copper Center, porth of Cor-| dova, & hot lunch is served every school day. Rice: cooked: in milk with fbrown. sugar is the Iavome dish. Recently the school Treceived from the Preshyferian Church at Valdez bacon and or.her dcceptable articles. Women in Cordova have formed repair them for distribution amnnsi poor children , Ghristmas. For supplying the Alaska Ml-, road with 34,000 tons of steam. coel, 800 tons of locomotive coal and' 500 tons of chestnut coal, bids | operating in the Matanuska field north of ‘Anchorage. The Evznsw Jones Ccal Company was, low on | the steam coal, $248 & ton, and | the locomotive coal, $2.48 a ton and the Alaska Premier Coal Corpora- | | tion 'was low on the chestnut coal, | $3.85 4 tom. | Hhaving set aside $3,000 for an Alaska exhibit < at the’ Chicago Fair, the Department of the In- terior thinks ‘another $1,000, or more, should be contributed by !.Alaska to make the exhibit more | comprehensive, = Howard "Gilman, who ‘i connected with the ‘De- partment told the OChamber of Gommerte of “Anchorage When he | was there recently. He sald Nome Had pledged $260. He wa§ advised by Robert 8. Bragaw, President; of the 'Territorial Chamber *‘of Comumérce, 10 take up the matter with that organiation. Profit resulted this year from the womgdtmolimmn’fm of “the Mebés Company within{ three miles of Nome. It was the{ s_ceondnmethedumpmdqufi- ble that Some nearby cmntry W be leased nm'ien' Last’ ‘au the ‘defécts and shortcomings “of its local radio service as any of its patrons, and anxious to remedy theim, the Chamber today sald it had ‘o protest to' make’ lbout its coniminications sérvice. {'The authonities have @ complete thorities” ate’* SPECIA COLD WEATHER GOING STRONG! an organization to collect toys and | a like reworking with equal suceess. Drilling for oil by Robert Brown an@ Fred Vance on a piece of ground owned by the Chikat Oil Cotpany at Katalla failed to pro- duce results. The drill reached| a depth ‘of 2,000 feet. caught in traps sufficient in am- ount to ‘make the.cost of such' ‘trap fish equal to. the cost of similar fish caught in nets 15" ad- vocated by the Cordova Chamber | of Commerce. A tax on non-resi-| dent fishermen and clam diggers is ajso urged Thirty dollars were netted from | 'a ‘dance given by the Cordova | {Community Charity Association. The money will go. into a fund for the care of unemployed. a fight between Tarzan and a bull the féscie of an elephant trapped in & pit, the charge of eléphants through a pigmy village! and the escape of the safari fromig.., ... Tevy of a Territorial tax onxed, salmon and,. on all other salmon | 38AL00N LIGHTS PLAY PART IN ‘HEADIN' NORTH’ Bob Steele Picture Will’ S how Saturday Only | at Coliseum | the lights” b old-imers gcan re- this command? In thea- | saloons and other. gathering f the days before electric- | ied the wild desert, the, was by means of lamps ' ure had to be kept up pumping. Motivate Plot In din' North” Tiffany's Trem Carr production featuring |Bob Steele, which will be shown only \ H | theatr loon’ lamps come in for their re of glory. In fact, they mo- tivate the plot to quite a large extent when their pressure tank is tampered with: at a dramatic moment. i Lights Are Turned OQut ; The lights aren't shot out with §,a gun in this—they're turned out. |at the right moment by a con- venient accomplice. t “Headin’ North,” with Barbara Luddy in the leading feminine role, nd a strong supporting cast, is directed by J. P. McCarthy. 1 8h a membership drive and are pre- purlno for a big dance Almx!:!ce mg‘nt the Bank of Alaska af” the close of busi- 12 totaled $637549. Deposits in {at Anchorage ness October | Work of making a landing and &aki off place for planes at Cor- dova has been virtually com- | pleted. Log Cabin No. 3, Native Sons and Daughters of the Golden North, sponsored by the Pioneers of \Alaska, will soon be instituted at ! Anchorage. \ Homer 'Ne raw tobaccos in Luckles —that’s why they're so mils WE at the (Coliseum the old-time frontier sa-| GRAND CANYON'S BEAUTY SEEN IN ‘RAINBOW TRAIL’ George O’ Brien Stars in‘ Western Play at | Coliseum Theatre | “The Rainbow Trafl,” starring | Goeorge O‘Brien, will be the head- line atitaction ‘tonight at the Coliseum theatre. ‘OBrien Impersonates the part of & lone cowboy, who single handed invades the strohghold of a band 'of désperadoes ‘In his attempt to |rescue three people from a hidden \and impenetrable valley. Fine Scenic Effects The pichure ‘contains some fine |scenic shots and sound effects. It was filmed: in the most Ilonely and least frequented sections of !the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. Three Weeks in Wonderland The company spent three weeks in ‘this Scentc wonderland, shoot- ing the outdoor Sequences of the | film against’ the towering cliffs and in ‘the hollows ‘of the deep |gorges, with awe-inspiring sunsets land marvelous- shadow effects. The supporting cast includes Cecilia Parker, - Minna Gombell, Roscoe 'Ates, J. M. Kerrigan, James |Kirkwood, W. L. Thorne, Robert |Frazer, Ruth. Donelly, Niles Welch, | Laska Winters, Landers Stevens, Alice Ward and Edward Hearn. Mayor of Seward, and Miss Aug—‘ ustine Bower, ‘who came North last spring and since has < been living with her aunt and uncle, | Mr. and Mrs. Hershey, were marri- |ed at Seward. | | Miss Bertha Louise Crawford and Edwin Lawrence Meier were [married at Anchorage, where they | |will make their home. Anchorage -Auxiliary of the Am- |erican Legion has installed Mrs. W. D. McKinney, president; Mrs. Arthur Reckle, first vice-president; Mrs. L. Strutz, second vice-presi- dent; Mrs, Kenneth Frawley, chap-, Boe, who is employed |lain; Mrs. Paul Marsh, secretary; head of the flying service of Cur- Vetérans of thi& Ametican Legion 'at John Hershey's mine at® Hope Mrs. Walter Culver, treasurer; Mrs. tiss“Wright Corporation, it became were submitted by three companies Post? gt Cordova have plans for(and whose rather was 1.he firsn leph Grover, thtcrrian buy |“Casey” Jones Quits | diaps majntained el the finest, thevery finest in all the world-— but that does not cxplam why . folks cvctywi;pte regard Lucky Strike ‘as the mildest cigarette. The fact is, we never overlook the COLISEUM THUBSDAY and FRIDAY Alone he battled . .~ mrmn{vmh an avm- ing-fury - borm—of ~her love- « . A hmuxdmm drs ma from Zane Grey’s vivid pen SHCRT SUBJECTS Brflhhxsum of include with NEWS—VITAPHONE ACTS—COMEDY o % o’ ¥ BREAD DAY - Every Friday SMALL WHITE LARGE WHITE ... G0 1lc SMALL WHOLE WHEAT AT ALL GROCERS: Front Street Next to Juneau Drug Co." ‘ As Plape Official BERDELEY Od.—cnm | NEW YORK, Nov. 3—C. S. (“Casey”) Jones has vendered his resignation as vice president and high . schools for the the' Kato religion, ‘prtgr w vhv coming of the white men, &ccotd- ing to’ a trdct published by Dr. Edwin' 0. Loeh, University. of-Oait= known today. lornin STRIPED. TIGER “Nature i the Rad*= as portrayed by the ware W MR mellowing, are then snvsgr the benefit of that Lucky Strike puri- fying process, described by the words—“It’s toasted”. 'That’s why folks in every city, town dnd hamlct say tbat L\u:ku: are md: truth that “Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild”’— so these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and \hdlia'mfladflisllSclgofi.k', .M ;