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o o 3 e e NI BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK ‘PLUG A Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau - ' UELO (GIRLIE ., T WANT To TALK TaE CUANRER oF COMMERCE HARRISBURG PA - HOwS THAT 2 ";M‘% TUATS NOUR HOME Towa, €N 2 WELL.WELL. NOU'VE GOYT A SWEET VOICE @ SLEPOSIN' \(OU CANCEL THAT HARRISBLURG CALL - TO QATH HAVE YOu TELL VE & Tue SXALTES i ANNOUNCED A & §8.90 PRIZE FoR ‘ EACH NANNVEOAT AND BLINGOAT WHO ORGANRED THE LARGEST CHAPTER AN ANGORA Foreoast for Tunean and vicinity, bextning 4 v. m. today: Rain tonight and Tuesday; fresh southeasterly winds. LOCAL DATA Time— Burom. Tems. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather| ] 4 p. . yest’y 2041 36 90 NW 3 Cldy 4 a. m. today. 29.85 37 84 SE 10 Rain | Noon today ”62 42 _ SE 10 Cldy_ uuu: AND RADIO REPORTS ] TODA Highest 3 pm. | “Low 8am. Sam. Preclp. Sam. Wy, temo. 1emg. \el--\l ¥ 24 hrs. Weather 4 4 | —12 0 Clear 16 12 6 [ Clay ! % 18 ~24 0 oudy 12 8 -10 0 Cldy 24 22 22 16 36 34 42 38 | . 88 30 | .38 36 42 48 32 . &0 62 56 WEWL - UERES A coms‘l& usy OF TOE TOWNS THAT WANT ‘lTAE BILYEOAT NATIONAL ConVENTION JusT EoR SPORT. TLL PlCk ong AT RANDOM AND CALL EM up o& QOF TRE 'MUSTERIOU THOUSANDS OF ENTRIES Eflgn\\ RECENED \;‘:4 OATS AND SISTER Goa 1N ST PAUL . NEW HAVEN, *TULSA . \&F [ WORCE éfibeeml\u& [SHREVEPOR] fi'fiw@ i ASO. SPNB:INA“NQ AL, ABOUT YouR c\‘lV~~“u“2 E%\:Wm‘eqwr v GOY A CHECKED & TV ARD €U SDRETS ON - Btationa—~ Nome Bethel « Fort Yukon.... Tanana .. Eagle St. Paul ... Duteh Harbor. Kodiak . Cordova Juneau .. Ketchikan ik Prince Ruper! Edmonton Seattle . Portland San Franeisco.. 14 32 36 32 37 40 12 42 40 4 52 8 *—Less than lO mites. Note.—Observations at Duich Harbor, Kod Juneau, Princ Rupert, Edmonton, Seattle, Portland and San Francisco are made gt 4 . m. and 4 p. m., Juneau time. The pressure i8 low throughout Alaska and southward to latitude 30 degrees north, with its lowest point south of the Snow Clay Cldy Snow Rain Cldy Rain Rain Clear Clear Clay 14 32 32 30 32 32 38 10 42 40 52 & 1y Sy T outiion Tieais, ta-. Cresy & letters the same as men——but thav! must give up their ple, cake and . candy. A women's athletic asso- tiation has been organized with College Girls Match ‘lrmm Bloch of Thompson, N. D, Skill Against Men’s ~ [it'oc TUESDAY NIGHT! In Campus Actlvuy‘ “Brown eyes can't shoot,” a | | Dlue-eyed senior at the University ! of Maryland, himselt a marksman, :First Mcefing of Year‘ Be} g Rogers Brushlng LMW 44 | 10 | 18 22 | | | 20 - 12 P-T. A MEETS Unfinished Furniture i 48 46 52 Just apply a‘coat of {told Mildred Hislop. Had he re- Tomorrow 8 P. M. in “{mained in school a little longoer e he would have found that brown School Audltonum eyes mot only could shoot, but and there you are—a plew of Gulf of Alaska, and it is high in the Pacific States and Brit8h Columfibla. Southerly gales pre Precipitation has been general coast to California, followed b, Cloudy weather prevails over much of the Interior. have fisen in the Upper Yukon and haye fallen in southern Bering | DovGLAS NEWS WEEK-END BRIDGE PARTIES Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Cahill enter- | taified with a four table bridge party at their home at Treadwell | ! Baturday evening. Honors for h 8haidshitt and E. F. Watkins; for| low by Mrs. W. M. Eddy and I H. ' Pearcp. Fallov;l‘ the serving of dainty tefrophments by the hostess, rugs ‘were removed from the floor, and dancing ‘was enjoyed until a late houir; . . and Mrs. Felix Gray were ' to” three tablés of Uridge at thelr hoiho on Saturday evening. Prige vytuners were Mrs. Lucile flm'. Mr. Mrs, J. H. MieHslspn. . Mus ture of the even MP‘RANGI lollov zovdrnmm noon.; betope Im M Sunday attor- \:the Jargest .year, M. ent . teacher, s d far the aniza X m to. e knowil as ui- Amerioan. Chrlstian Tepiperance, Unign.. Such acticn was {mmediately aken by unanim. pus, vote of thosm: E. James wés thbin . mad man.. A comm tion was appoint .the mee*- ing . ddjburned. Wh A step towartl the ellql of alco- B héverages ithe In- didnd and is to the work .f the N. P. T. Short weekly meetitigs. are hed, to which everyone will be. welcome. P —— WITH THE SicK " Mrs, Nels Andorson and Mrs. James Edmiston are seriously ill &t _their homes hete, and under &: cotistant ~ attention of their siclans. rs. Charles Sey was able to be out today for the first time fol- lowing two: woeks iliness. —————— EAGUE TEA NEXT WEEK iry -16; inste date of the m;(, m FOR FEBRUARY . INSPIRES QUAINT BELIEFS scores were won by Mrs. A.| .. will be made most quickly if the - | various vail west of Vancouver Island. in Southern Alaska and along the y clearing in the Pacific States. Temperatures Kuskokwim valleys and Sea. next tea to be given by the La- dies’ league. SLUMBER PARTY The girls of the Freshman class jot the Douggu high school, sur- prised Mrs. Lucille Edwards at {her home last Saturday night, i being her birthday. The affair |resolved itselt intoe. a slumber :party. Mrs. Edwards is class advisor |for the Freshmen. She was pre sented by her pupils with an ivory souvenir. { —teo—— FINED FOR DRUNKENNESS 8. J. Meade and Ray Walt were arrested Saturday night for being intoxicated by Deputy U. 8. Marshal Eddy and at a hear- 1ing before United States Commis- sioner Charles Sey this morning plead guilty and were fined $25 each and costs. In various college activities strate their ability. Mildred Hislop upper . Short Wave Bands|sity and ‘Trene (Centinuea nom rage One.) ¥ 35 ’ NEW YORK, Feb. 6—The Amer-| ican girlibeg:ns matching her skill | against that of men before she‘ leaves college, reports from . dif- ferent scetions indicate. Down at Louisiana State unl' versity, in Baton Rouge, women have won preference as editors. For the first time in the institu- tion's hlstory. lhe studenu week- triple freqyencles to insure liability for 24-hour service may cut down the number of workinz channels actually attainable but the use of directive methods and the -rapidly improving design of receivers eventually should offset at least a part of such limitations and. thus make additional chan- ! nels . useful. = Such improvements re- women begin early to demn (left), University of Maryland, is the 192% wemen’s national indoor rifle champion, Lillian Jacobs | r;.ht) edl the etudent weekly at Louitiana State Uniwe- ooh (lower right) is President of the newly of- ganized women’s athletic association at Midland Collegs. ly and ahnual publications are headed by co-éds. Lillian Jacows is editor of;tho wuekly and Cary Johnson' heads ! the annual, Helen Gilklson, now assoclate editor of both publica- tions, will become editor-in-chief of the annual next year, Midland college co-cds, at Fro- | mont, Net, now mly win athletic could find the mark consistently. Miss Hislop, a junior at the uni-! versity, has claimed the national indoor rifle shooting championship for women during 1927. Her rec- ord was 99.76 per cent for a total of 28 matches shot last year. Untll her brown eyes were chal-| lenged in her freshman year, Miss Hislop never had touched a rifle. Some of Miss Hislop's closest competition . for national honors came from other members of the | university girls’ rifle team, Alice Orton, a sophomore with an aver- age of 9071 per cent in 17 matches, and Hazel Kreider, a ju- nior with 9951 per cent in 29 i matches.” ————— ATTENTION L. 0. 0. M. NO. 700 All members are urged to be present at 8:00 p. m. as we are entertaining the B. P. 0. E. —adv, sl Lt e JACA OF ALL TRADES Let me &6 your oad jobs. Phone {473, John Holler, Prop. —adv. CALL FOR BIDS Juneau Public Sahool hereby calls for bida for the con- struction, pliimbing, electric wir- ing and heating and. ventilating | lof the néw gchool building, in iaccordance with plans and speci- fications 'which odn be examined lat Buperintendent’s Office, Public - |Bchool; between hours 0 a. m. to 5 p. m and 7 p. m, to 10 p. m, daily {ncluding Sunday. Bids must be submitted in accordance with specifications and plans. Bids must be filet with Juneau School, Board, or in oftice Superintendent Bchools, on or before 5 p.,m.| Febuary 10, 1928. Right is re- served to reject any and all bids. JUNEAU PUBLIC SCHOOL o DOARD. interests who desire \ to | cafry on good engincering work | under proper supervision are en- | couraged to make use of the chan- {nels now available, of course um- der check by the commission.” When the technique. of the short wave art is developed furtn- er, there should be available some 30,000 chanmels in the band from 200 to 10 meters, Mr. Hogan as- |serts. The reason that these channels are not available now is twotold, he says. First, the diffi- cufty of stabillzing frequency on very short waves to preveht tres. pass upon neighboring channe.s placed as closely as modulation alcie would permit; second, the fact that receiver selectiveness is not yet high at the short waves, i DON'T FORGET-—Parish Card Party: next Tuesday night. Public invited. —adv. LOUISVILLE, Ky, Feb. 6.— Having ‘closed the most prospar- ous year in turf history with the distribution ¢f more than $13,000,- 000 to winners, horsemen are pre- ;l;cun‘ an even higher figure for 28. These avuars rolled into stable owners’ pockets and the treasuries of racing associations in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Cuba, officlals doclare ia checking the money turnovers fov i the track year. ' The Matropolitan. courses, as is | former years, were the leaders) with - $2,462,975. Saratoga’s onc meet accounted for $503,166 of this ‘Sum, while Belmont Park's| two meetings contributed §$749. 230. . Acqueduct, Jamaica and Em- pire City helped swell the total. Illinofs “tracks finished a close | second with a total distribution of “120 425. Fairmount Park léd the -Illinois -tracks with $481,380 | Lincoln Fields, Washington Park, Hawthorn, Aurora and Arlingtcn i . Park emt.rlp'ted in the order 'l‘wentymm tracks operated in the Deminion: gave 319 racing days with the Iargest stake and | purse values ‘In years. Kentucky Jockey Club tracks were the main contributors to more than $1,710,668 distributed on Blwe Grass courses. Maryland tracks conducted 92 :days of racing, distributing $1, 506,387, The winter tracks conttibuted largely with _ Tiajuana leadiug them with mfl) Fair Grounds strife and care can never with lnr dwou." Mfl. e . turfmen missed the biz ! gs.'at: Coney Lsland, mear|Vice- , |Cin ,’fi the Thistle Dow: | course near Cleveland, due to tha mapmt these thre> s in- by county attorneys form of wager- l EASTERN TRACKS AGAIN PROVIDED HIGHEST PURSES laws. A court ruling was obtain- ed against the tracks. In Florida legal obstacles baged on the same grounds hindered the running of regular programs. Akron, Hamilton and Columbus in Ohlo, however, contributed w over $300,000 to turf offerings. Race courses west of ‘the Rocky Mountains contributed their quv- tas, — New Bills Will Mean New Billfolds; Notes Be Circulated in Year WASHINQ'I‘ON Feb. 6.—Fath- er can count on at least one Christmas. gift at the end of this year—a mnew style bill-fold. Not only are the $1 bills to be one-third smaller ‘than the ones {used at present, but the new sise is also going to be used for fives, 10s, 208, ete. The changes will be made and |the bills put in circulation with- in a yearp bert . Brown, chiel of the bm; f refticiency, has informed the house committee on uppmmlumv ording to the d. " bills will be v § Veteran CEICAGQ Feb. 6.—Robert E. Wood, mew President of Sears, Roebuck and.. .Company, has spent only nine years in the mail order business. . -He beoame Vice-Presir dent of Montgomery Ward and/ ompany-in 1919 and had beem of Sears, Roebuck ‘since 1924. West Point graduate and a soldier of years’ standing. He was acting Quartermastpr Omfl when the United Sta w.- i 1917, t|plea for the teachers, F zfzy-Ezglu Cehits Daily Is Wage of Spanish, Teachers MADRID, Feb. 6.—The econ- omic plight ot Spain’s teachers was debated in the National As- sembly yesterday. Asgemblyman Slorut said that about 10,000 teachers were earn- ing only 4 pesetas (rodghly &S cents) a day, which, he asserted, |4 was less than a common laborer ! is pald for his toil. About one thousand of the teachers were |paid 500 pesetas ($68) annually, 'hg declared. He, added 500,000 boys and’ girls were receiving a first-class ucation despite this. The Minister of Education safd he recognized the justice of the but . that good will alone was not sufficient since extraordinary funds were ]| needed to deal with the lltunmm.1 Robbers Who Got | $1.85 Sentenced To Pemtenuary BPOKANE, Feb. 6. ‘McDonald, 22 years old, and Stephen Uoucher, 31, held up Paul Teters on . a downtown street and 'then Coucher struck him over the head with a u- volver. A passerby witnessed the mhr bery, followed the men to a hotel and then called the police. They' plead. guilty to highway robbery and McDonald was sentenced to eight years in the penitentiary and Coucher to ten years, The robbery hetted them §1.85.] ——ee —— POODLES AGAIN FASHIONABLE PARIS, Feb. 6. — French |} poodies, tiie “‘caniches,” half cur- ; 1y coated and hlt-clou—cll”d, are .in (.-vo,;r v tav t out of § immediately after lodge is over.| = b e Juneau, Alllkn 3 — Robert 1 The first meeting of the Paren’ 1 Teacher Association of Juneau to be held this year .will be tomor- row night at 8 o'clock in the high school auditorium of the public, schools, it was announced today. A number of business matters will come before the members and there will be a program to be followed by the serving of refresi- ! ments. R. 'S. Raven, principal of .the high school, will be the speaker ! of the evening. i The boys’ gymnasium classe3!] will demonstrate calisthenics and drills, 1 The glee clup, under the direc- tion of Miss Eunice Zimmorman, will present a group of songs. e, ‘Hes DATE—Feb. 14; dance In Douglag —adv. artistic farniture [ 2 ATTENTION FUR FARME;(S A,Nn TRAPPERS Womlnmwbtlnihtfi of Blue Foxes. Before dispostalf o lnpply‘ttwpflmn“fiim“ can do ‘bettet for ‘you than onstids Hotses. SAvVE Masquerade Natatorium. 3 T. H. THORKE] LDSEN Phonokraph Repairing Bl L35 INVOICES BOOKLETS ENVELOFES PRICE L1518 CATALOGUES STATEMENTS OFFICE FORNS LETTER HEADS ANNOUNCEMENTS NO ONE KNOWS EVERYTHING ABOUT ANYTHING o BUT-—- The Empire’s Job Pnnung Depamnent knows how to do your printing the figfit way and at M prices. | LA ¥ svfi(&n Yt Complete mnovmmm{ ,pm ment enables The Empire tn _guete yficu will satisfy., P pid i 5 L B We have reeemly lnlulled machikery and supplies for, 143 Raued Letter Prmimg Adegge 0 Y oy WE KNOW YOULL LIKE IT! The Daily. Alaska E-.,m Jop PrinriNe DEPARTMENT CHAS. ‘GOLBSTEIN & GD: 4 e ] £ D o e