The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 28, 1927, Page 7

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VISITING HERE Mrs. Vernon Welch, Miss Mahjalla Berry of Juncau, who; with her nine month's old baby is visiting relatives there for the holidays, was the guest of Miss Alberta Gallwas over the week end. Mrs. home is in Los Angeles. — ) SERIOUS ILLNESS Mrs. Gust Wahto is quite ill at her home with double pneumonia as the result of a severe coid which she contracted a few, days | ago. — - — WATSON 18 SUNDAY BOAT The Admiral Watson docked here from the south yestarday with a_small tohnage of merchau- dist for local merchants and 1‘ shipment of hay for the “Pouglas Dairy. —o— McBRIDE WANTED Information is desired abont | Patrick F. or Philip, F, McBride | (sometimés used ~hoth names). Has. been in Alaska for thirty | years, and last heard from on the Upper Yukon. Is some sitxy years old, a miner. Rhode Island. Send any informa- tion concerning, Mr. McBride to the' Governor's Office at Juneau, Alaska. ALASKA MAN WON VOTE BET, HE SAYS (Seattle Times) i The San Francisco News today | carried an interview with Capt.! Sidney Barrington, Beattle steari ing how he “took San I‘rnnc for $150,000 at the recent munici- pal election. According to The \ews (,‘a)» tain Barrington denied he hlre‘ll “peepers” or was assisted in any way by agents selling the voting | machines used inwthe election fi making the betting coup. Captaip Barrington was quotei | as saying he and two partries ‘and . several Seattle peopla b“‘ $106,000 on the election and won | about $150,000. His end of winnings was said to be $55,600 ‘or $60,000. i The News quoted Captain Bar- ‘rington as follows: “We decided to bet on the San Francisco election ahout. two ‘months ago. I sent my agent| down here. He made all . Jpreparations. 1 did mot leavo| rangell, Alaska, my home, un-| 1 October 8. Most of the work bad been done by then. My tho | nts came down here and at;! ce began to make a survey o( Public opinion. ¥ “We sent out some 20,000 let- “fors to voters seeking an expres- on of opinion. We did not ask em to tell us who they would te for, we merely asked who, | their opinion, would be elected. r letters were written so that ey were in no way partisan. “] don’t knmow how many re- fes we got, but we heard from it least 10,000 persons represent- every walk of life.” ptain Barrington then relat- according to The News, that based his bets on the opin. set forth in the letters. ~ The most pathetic fl‘urc in the 1d today is the woman whul 't keep warm without ankle-| i gths and has. a husband too r to allow her to apsnd the inter where it is warm enough ) g0 without them. Mnnmu arways DAYS. nul 3 ;;.Q columns of The Empire. - Chrislmas cards galore. Seo bem at Guy's Drug Stoye. (Adv.) formerly || if Welch's present Formerly lived in ! § TS ANT RIGHT MISTER. ! T was /2 ¢ GETTIN READY {vff‘f)m\"v‘l SRR el T8 SHONE OFF N\ 'pigappainTen TABLY WHEN) WA L Nou CrMvE AND “LOWIRED ME = ARE Nou Gon ] | | | il i Mll.LlCENT ROGERS SECRETLY WEDS ARGENTlNlAN |3 Mllhcent Rogers (left center). daughter of Col and Mrs. chry Hud- dleston Rogers, Standard Oil millionaires, and former wife of Count | i Ludwig Salm Von Hoogstraeten (right center), has just secretly mar- NQW - (F You wne GINE ME YOUR AND NECKTIE = NOu Wil BE READY | | ried the handsome Arturo Peralta Ramos (left), wealthy Argentine youth. With them is pictured young Peter Salm, over whose possession ew:ntually winning, WHERE WORKMEN MADE SPARKS 'IHAT CAUbLD B B oA | 8 ‘Workmen were mending one of the storage tanks of the Equitable Gas Compsany of Plttsburgh, Pa., and it s thought that sparks from welding torches ignited gas in the huge tank which was supposed to be empty. Parts of the tank were found at lcast a mile from the scene of the explogion In which move than twenty ;flu killed and h-ndr-d injured. ") GREAT FUTURE ume| Count and. former Countess Salm had long legal war, with Millicent is the purpose of | furnish | promul 1 | cants | points ! amin { until [well as by day SHRRT = RIGHT TG .00 ; fi[a 0o 0o A, i stration and ing of fi, tha ex and licensing of pilots chanies, the identificatic i icenged, and air traffic One of t} the Ae atics Branch of air ragulations ppointment of experi- enced ai ft and engine insp tors to form tha nucleus force which within a year pected ‘to reach fifty. A madic director was namad to o the work of .giving ph aminations to pilots and appli- for pilot’s licenses and 200 physicians at various | throughout the designated as medical ex- s, Ten new airplanes were d or contracted for, of five have been placed n.)(\mtvnn At the close of the fis. cal year work of examining appli- and the about were ! cants for licenses was p | but 3 ! country not ell the had app! applications e 1 for only a small ireraft in operation. quirements of the departm is pointed out, are not und od and many 0 1 bably delay applicati the department’s reprosen- es get in personal touch with Vh(m in the field. It is menl’lltl | that additional civil plancs a now being placed in oper: the rate of over 100 whlchv will increase the nd plane_demands flying by ni and in all vi situdés of weather and so the Com Department, the report to air traffic { which will result in tho greatost ‘I.u ich 0( the FOR AVIATION | IN U, 8. SEEN Director of Aeronautics, Makes Public His AnnyalReport (Continuea rrom Psge One.) e —— ard air traffic rules, an quate dissemination’ informa- tion concerning on air- ways ond airports, hn these matters that the Government must render a very mu. and comprehensive service, and it wa- to provide the “for this service that . Aeronautics branch was om" Congress. an ade- ‘regulations -“ collection and’ | { made. On June 30, 21 miles nf th - Commerce Depart- | | ment, Radiotelephony iments in radioteleghony, | ctive radio beacon and the ' beacon marker were con- ad during the year by the Bureau of Standards at College, Park, Md,, and Bellefonte, Pa. As| a result of its work the Burean feels that these three items of its| radio program are ready for ac {tual trial in daily use on airwa; While the visual indicator prob lem has not heen satisfact solved, much progress has be ay During the coming year u, numbar of new problems will be| n up, including a study of the| stribution of the light from bea-| an investigation of the' i WE ARE GLAD To SEE You RER| Know THaT FAIR AND SQUVARE BUR most exccllent business ‘©o - | investigation of ' about country | has continued to thrive |because every order repeats it- clf. It's a rather comfortable |arrangement for a housewife to be able to depend upon a grocery shop that sells only the best of foods and serves her faithfully well at all times. SANITARY GROCERY mn-fiu BILLE DE BECK QUR EXALTED ANGORA HAS B i e RIGHT J T wnee OF EROTHER GoodiLe 00" 00/.00 k 6% b0 Tabs o 0Co strength of fittings of airplane joints and | standard = desig and | the stability cf planes of diffe types, i of methc noises. aim of the Commerce De- roung states i hpnl i3 to brin tion of all th ssential to t civil aeronautics When this has been the public wiil take clemen Adverusing arways the columas of T —— To Adl THAT FINISHING. ToUcH To The Daily Meal cure to scrve these choice bukery ts on your table. J’A"‘BLR“ Crisp, salted to d’l'l'ht'uf with soup, or just clone, Graham, t.o. In boxes or in bulk. CCOKIES — Ceme in a wide f shapes, flavors, cnd a cookie fer cv- *l‘smn-iancy, pla’n, ted. CALIFORNIA GROCERY Phone 478 WILL BE PRouDTE w. t J tor of Immigration for the entire | f#——— teiritory, is in Juneaun this and | yqo Bl B of veducink |y | tion cases. { How MucH \S TS BUSINESS GonnAa coer ME ¢ AS PURE as flb&tfi KISSED BY DEW - THE LAUNDRY WE ALASKA STEAM LAUNDRY PRONE 13 i ; i | 1 i ‘l n SEND BACK TOVeu ! | | f | G. Strench, o, i e Our Work 1» Our Best Advertisement~ Capitol Dye Works C. Meldner — Profeasionsl Cleaner and Dyer—Phone 177 — e the tation in ¥ into several imr ame north ¢ on from h to look Financial embarrassment—sometimes due to lack of judgment—is usually due to lack of funds When You Need Your Banker You Need Him You want to kitow he is dcpendable cnd that he is in sym- pathy with your nlans, 'Therefore it ways to enalyze the situation in aldvance ond pvin your faith and loyalty to a banking connsction thet will be worthy of your {rust. If we ars ccleetzd we promise faithful effort. First National Bank “There is no Substitute for Safety” b2 “If you won'’t tell 'em you can’t sell ’em.” CHRISTMAS Goods should be on display now--'---TODAY. TELL 'El through the columns of The Empire ‘Alaska’s Biggest and Best

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