The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 22, 1928, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 22, 1928 Weltller Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Burean Pirbbhst ‘or ' Fusbds snd vicialty, vegtuntng 4 'o. m. today: Fair tonight and xl“!‘lumday, light ‘variable winds. LOoCA gann.'naxenn. 25 .38 %fimfib 4{!& Ve)bcih 'uthet Bl 80 - Qll‘ Clear W $ p.m. ‘ v tewn. | [ B 8 T | 8 12 34 40 38 30 38 Highest Il!llunl-. oy Nome . 32 Bethel 44 Fort Yukon... ~2 Tapana - 14 Bagle .. 14 8t. Paul ... 34 Duteh . Harbor.. 40 Kodiak 40 Cordova ... Juncau ... Ketchikan te—Observations at Duich Harbor, TODAY Low 8a.m. v:’n.n_ x;:-hup o temp. m-u. ocity. 24 hr: i 7720 Trace | 32 .06 $am. Weather Snow Cldy Clear Clear Clear Snow 34 —24 8 8 32 34 40 30 25 *—Leas Rain Clay Clear —_ Clear than 10 mnies. Kodiak, Juneau, Princ Rnpon, Edmonton, Seattle, Portland and San Francisco are made at 4 a. m. and 4 p. m., Juneau time. Under the influence of high " barometric pressure over the Upper Yukon Valley, fair weather prevailed this morning over the eastern portion of Alaska, while snow was generally report- ¢d over the westérn section, resulting from the effect of an ex- tensive low presgure areg south of the Aleutian Islands. Seasonable temperatures prevailed today !hmughout the Ter- ritory.. AR, s M ‘DOUGLAS NEWS. * Washington’s birthday was ob- served in Douglas today by the closing part time of the business houses. A holiday was also taken by the publie- school. el e IMPROVING PROPERTY Mike Rlesser who recently pur- chased the three cottages former- ly belonging to the Hucbner estate has awarded the comtract of repairing the foundations and otherwise improving the properiy to Nels Anderson, who has al- ready started on the. job. Ries- ser intends to put the three houses in first class condition both inside and out, when they will offer convenient accommoda- tions for new residents. —_—— e, — . NEWLYWEDS CHIVARIED A large crowd of young folks gathered around the McCormick home ‘last evening to serenade My, and Mrs. Richard McCormick, Jr, who were married Monday. ‘Such a racket was forthcoming that the bridegroom was forced ! to divest himself of all his small ./ehange to dismiss_the crowd. : ————— “SEA HORSES” IS # DRAMA OF THRILLS @ilm fans who prefer drama of the red-blooded variety, seasoned ,plenty of thrills and flavored with the sauce of romance, will find “Sea Horses” a very appetiz- ing . screen dish, showing at the Liberty tonight. : This new Paramount melodrama ‘which has its first local showing at the Liberty tonight, has been very expertly directed by Allan Dwan, and is spiritedly enacted ‘by & capable cast featuring Jack Holt, Florence Vidor, George Ban- croft and William Powell. i, The basis of this cinematic concoction is the Francis Brett Young story of the same name, bfit Mr. Dwan, with the assistance of . Becky Gardiner and James Hamilton, adapter and scenarist, ‘respectively, has managed to in- «lude several: original spectacular ingredients which add consider: ably to the um value of the fiim, + The added: llluluul of eiab- ,orm mounting, - tropical satmes- iphere and marvelous photography make the production as pictorially utiful as ‘it is emotionally stimulating. Paul H. Abbott, Alaska repre- ‘sentative of the Du Pont Powder Company, artived on the Ala- meda ‘from Ketchikan where he ‘has_been on business. HISTORICAL ASSN. ANNUAL MEETING : - TOMORROW NIGHT The annual meeting of the Alaska Historical Association will be held tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in the council chambers of the City Hall, it was announc- ed today by Rev. A. P. Kasheva- voff, secretary. The chief busi- ness before the meeting will be the election of officers and thd report of the secretary on the ac- tivities of the Association dur- ing the past year. The report of the Secretary, Rev. Kashevaroff said, will in- clude information of the rescarel and historical work carried on by the Association and the accom- plishments of the = organization, the last which includes the secur- ing of many rare and historic specimens for the Territorial Mu- seum. A number of measures will be brought before the meet- ing which it is said will be bene- ficial to the Museum and tho So- clety. Seventeen Hundred Communists Killed; 600 Girls.Are Saved SHANGHAI, Feb. 22.—Canton dispatches state that 1,700 alleg- ed Communists, men and women, ihave been executed by Canton |troops after their capture on Feb- ruary 20,, The Cantonese also captured 600 members of the Girls’ Communist Corps but these were not executed. > Mrs. B. B. Green arrived on the Alameda from . Ketchikan where she has been visiting. ——— H. F. Preston, traveling: man, is in Juneau, having arrived from Ketchikan on the Alameda. UNITED STATES MARSHAL'S SALE. First Division, District of Alaska. By virtue of an Order of Sale issued out of the United States District Court for the First Di- vision, District of Alaska, on the twenty-first day of February, 1928, notice is hereby given that I will sell by public auction, for cash, on Thursday, the eighth day of March, 1928, at 2 o'clock P. M., at the front emtrance of the Court ‘House at Juueau, Al- aska, the Floi :uu Fish Trap, Li-| ‘eense No. 26-138, (known as P. E. Harrig’ Floating Trap. No. 1, its lead, Hhearts, pots, splilers, nets, webbing, house, winches and other gear and equipment there- on, all of which is set-forth in an Order of Court issued Febru- ary 21, 1928, ¢ 3 ALBERT WHITE, United States Marshal. By :W. R. GARSTER, Publish Feb. 22, 29, Mar. 7, 1928 “SE4 HORSES” An ALLAN DWAN Production - wigh. JACK HOLT—FLORENCE VIDOR— ‘ - GEORGE BANCROFT-WILLIAM POWELL far from and a nhlpl A Hammer-and:tongsaction. Dalfghtsut seas—three gruff sea- te had placed” aboard - romance, Sh the Createst Fight—The Finest Storm— The Tenderest Love “Wll GANG” COMEDY la Clear | \ BARNIT‘J} GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG ' E He GRFIEERS FROM WASHINGTON \WHO I OIONT & HOPED To DAZZLE RARNEY'SY TEWLING OF TWE ENORMOULS PROFIT Ta B2 GAINED (= HE WOULD APPOINT THEM HIS CAMPAIGN MANAGERS HAVE HAD UTTLE OR NO SUCCESS WITH The XACTED ANGORA OF THE BILVGOATS gmw_vs THOLWGHTS ARE. CENTERED (ZN THE WISHES OF WIS BELOVED "OUOWERS - HE WAS NQ SE (AOTWES WHATEVER T'flxs—“ : WE ARE SURE ! i (’\EAA !.Q < OKN BUSINESS = INS\DE OF we RE MINUTES WHEN SOME BiG GUY USHERED ME QLT - BT, I GOT THIS (MUCH. CHIEF = Do UKE TS AND VELL BAAA T A CHANCE To =1 WAS OnLY QUGHYT & SET THE (0DGE Two Su THAT'S PROBABLY THEIR. SEE MUCH OF TUE RILLYGOAT | SECRET SIGNAL =it ME RGUT WITH THE GOOGLE GUY = IVE ARRANGED FER AN APPOINTMEAT | WIT A s AFTER - | (NOON AN TtL v on Bathing Suit Styles Censored by Umpire At Palm Beach Clubi Connie Lewis (rlght), baseball umpire, finds winter employ- ment at Palm Beach, Fla, where he censors feminine bathing suits | at the Breakers Casino. proved costume, with conservative neckline and skirt, hose that moet the bottom of the suit and 'a wrap worn when the swimmer is mot in the water, dent below would pass muster ¢n most beaches, but not at the Breakers unless hose reaching to the skirt were added. PALM BEACH, Fla., Feb. 22— The average iwo-piece bathing suit adorning a pretty girl, xn!| ficiently modest to pass the regu- l lations of virtually every resort ir 'his censorship, but standing means nothing to Lewis when bathing suits fail to meet regulations. The Breakers management has The bather at the left is wearing an lp-' The two-piece suit of the Brenau College stu- | Ied In the soclal regiater are under | laid down strict regula- for him to enforce, and the { requircments this season are no {more rigid than in the past. Brief-| ly, women must wear two-piece! bathing suits. Low cut necks :\h\‘ bay and th> skirts must ' bly long, which mean; 1y’ sover tha suil. triaks. | i Stockings must be worn, and | what is more they must meet the bottom of the suit. No “rolling ‘em” is permitted. ' “Nothing like the things you sce len opean beaches goes here,’ jLewis explains. “One-picce suits .are not allowed. Short skirts may igat by, but positively ther2 must |be no lcw cut backs. Last yea |some girls had suits that bad lit- {tle back. They sald they wanted {to get tanned. But that’s no ex |cuse this season. There's a new | |ladi-s' sun room for tanning.” ! When Ziegfeld’s Follies came here last season the girls came near smashing traditions. It took strenuous work to convince them that Breakers Beach rules wore meant for them. Not so long ago,! ! the wife of a visiting German dra- matist appeared in a limited edi- tion of a jersey white suit. When ghe startod into the ocean, thera was a noic2 all over the beach. Someonc picked her up and she neatly dropped at the Ci entrance, Lew however h> may | with baschall playefs, is ;vuu h of a diplomat when a gi {costume is censured. If a ma escort is present, he approaches! quietly and assigns to the cscort the task of getting the lady out jof ht until the mnecessary, | changss are made. | At the Bath ana Tennis ciub' here, bathing togz rules are left to! cach member, but the extreme| ‘ouit geldom appears. | satins and other decorativo \terial prevail,* and most of ‘;Ihmhvr: use stockings. - Shipment of “Henry Made a |Lady Out of Lizzie” records ar- ‘ri\'nl. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. —adv. b ba ma- (S the 0Old papers for sala at 'The Empire. 3 » | s Colds Nippedinthebud” without “dosmz‘" by rubbing ov throat and chest {of Warren Gedd Fions. [ EOR COLDS OF ALL THE FAM || Sulphus popular because| nobody can dis- America, would never pass the! r—i—— rigid restrictions of the fashion- able Breakers Casino in Pnlm Beach. For the costume of every hxr bather appearing on the beach' passes under the eagle eye of: Connie Lewis, * veteran haseball umpire, who for many winters has called the high and low on bath- | ing suits here. - Heiresses and i \women whose names are imprint. | TURN HAIR DARK ‘WITH SAGE TEA If Mixed with Sulphur 1 Durkens So. Naturally 't "4 Nobody: Can Tell Child’s Size, | Women’s Size, 45 cents each THIS IS A SPECIAL SALE 20 cenis each The old-time mixture of Sage; For Thursday, Friday 'l' & and Sulphur for darkeningj streaked and faded halr is :nndlumcr'- recipe, and folks are again using it to keep their hair a good, even color, which is quite sensible, as we are living, in ‘an age when a youthful ap- | pearance is of the greatest ad-| vantage. - - . Nowadays;, though, we don't have the' troublesome task of gathering.tke sage and the mus- sy mixing at home. All drug stores sell the ready-to-use prod- uct, for only 75 cents, improved by the addition of other ingred- iemts, called *‘Wyeth’s Sage and d.”. I is very nants will be cover it has applied. Simply molsten your comb or a soft brush DON'T with it and draw this through hair, - taking one - smlall time; by morning the gray hair dln»enn. but what delights the ladles with Wyeth's 3 Sulphur. Compound, -is. w Besutifully darken- the after a few applica- it'lkl produces that soft munce of abund- hn teractive. . and Saturday Windows Friday Is REMNAN T DAY Owing to inventory being taken at _this time ‘a really fine lot of Rem- on sale that day. MISS IT PRSREPE . 21 ‘GOLDSTEIN'S EMPORIUM YLE CENTER Nsw ESSEX cAn NOW IN muEAu ‘ . | The first of e 1928 Essa!l automobiles to reach Juneau came north yesterday on the steamer Alameda and b me the property who purchased | the car through Thomas J. Me- Colorful in two shades of deep | blue green, the new Essex Supe; Six Sedan expresses the lat vogue in motor cars by its low, roomy length, high Essex hund and long, low windows. Four wide doors give entrance ' wide, deep, form-fitting cush- Rich velour upholstering harmonizes with the exterior body color and is accented by patterned | hardware with a Colonlal design | to L LIQU The Mop By BILLE DE BECK TeE 96 suMm - F HE'S A BILy TMA cnmmg : AND T DIDNFT HE To W unM{o 3. apy ANY GUY TuAT buu« KNOW ENOUGH To SAY OKMNX HAS Mo ID VENEER LOOR MUP you can wash CLFAN " The Swab comes off in a jiffy Thomas Hardwam Cn THE and brushed silver finish. A high, slender radiator, larger | Colonial headlamps, sweeping, wide, deep crowned fenders, sad- dle cowl lamps, miniature of the headlamps and a classic winged figure atop the radiator give a| new distinetion. : The starter, electro-lock, speed- ometer and gasoline guage are on the instrument board, while the horn, throttle and light controls ! are at the center of the qtoerlun wheel. Bendix four<wheel brakes are part of the car’s equipment, while wheels are of wood, with balloon | tires all around, The car is of ; 17.32 horsepower. & —— | Old Papers lnr nle nt The I"mmru fevrrrrrrrrrrrrres Juneau Lumber Mills, bw. ——LUMBER FOR EVERY PURPOSE— WE RECOMMEND VERTICLE GRAIN HEMLOCK FLOORJNG WE HANDEE Lime 91t lodceu will satufy. Stlks and | SPOVRITIONIIIINNEHTIIR I ER M TN ORISR IRE IR IRVOICES BOOKLETS ENVELOPES PRICE LISTS CATALOGUES STATEMENTS OFFICE FORMS LETTER HEADS ANNOUNCEMENTS v EvERYTHING ABoUT, ANYTHING NO ONE KNOWS 4 BUT-— fiete an‘tomll.ic printing |')reu ment enables The Emplre to guote pneel The Empire’s Job Pfiflmgfl)antment knows hmv to do your prmung the right way lnd at flfl ) L T We have teuntly mnulled nuclm:zry and uppliu ior Raised Letter Pnntmg i M‘MM method on your | business stationery. WE KNOW YOU'LL LIKE AT IT! e j e e ey b o

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