The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 9, 1928, Page 2

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V) [y i TERNS ARE THE ( FABRICS FOR S EY reandies, voile V ) Pyocmcrfiyon ORGANDIE! implicity of ring and call for in the ¢ the have The style mer dre nsual 1 an romrer Rprcmen 24 bipeocnc this jon of very pr White or und, with deltgns or all-over patet Piiced at G0c, $1,00 $1.10 the yavd. SOISETTES this with 1 need new dresses at a reverse TRIMMINGS AND NOTIONS e little nized a ¢ will sary be by ho have Spring We will glad e deciding of 1y of the are plan- women w to do Priced at E % roit Quifielders .4},, ain Seek The Detroit Tigers can League, pin their hopes § Bob Fothergill (center), heavywcight from the SL Lm.: Browns. SAN ANTONIO Tyrus Cobb i topped the bats can League for a sons he started some tradition that Detroit aren’t going to give up w struggle. - That unwritten ruie that slugger: his } win titie | ers four times—every other year since | thout &/ 1921—while Heinie Manush rose {to the occasion in 1926. Hell- the | mann’s orles all have come in | batting championship of the odd years and according to that| league must go to a member of way of figuring he isn't due this! the Detroit outfield has been up-|season. He doesn’t see it that held even though Cobb is now way ldl.h another .club, and the battle| Heilmann carried off the crown to keep the honmor there will be last vear in a burst of melodra-| an interesting sidelight of the | matic baseball that made it look | pennant race. The records show ' as though a miracle had been per- m’u gained the crown 17|formed to keep the tradition of times in the 25 years the club has | Detroit individual h.uung suprem- )‘“ M league—more times'acy intact, Cobb's, | ich New Fabrics -‘Home Dressmakjng il complete assortment . and percales. howin, B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store o colifreelifetreeeiforrmeeifoosaelifverme e ATy who have produced 17 batting champions in their 25 ancther individual crewn on Harry Heilmann 224 Harry Rice (1ight), speedy . Heilmann was a precious point or |two down to Al Simmons of the THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1928. ambition | Another to year repeat at the this season top would a clear claim to a record second {only to that of Cobb. His present j record of four championships has { been equalled by only one other American League player, Napoleon Lajoie. | Even if Heilmann should falter, | the Detroit outtield may still pro- |duce the batting king. Bob (“Rhino”). Fothergill, left | fielder, batted .359 last year and has always been among the lead- ers, while Harry Rice, who was in € obtained from the St. Louis n .. Browns this wintér in the for Heinie Manush, JUTSTANDING UMMER oleeiies, by Manager Morfarty. Fothergill reported several ger of Iosing his job to Paul Fasterling, a recruit, proved quite a stimulus. Rice batted below 300 'with the Browns last year, but Moriarty thinks he can be carried well above that figure this year by developing his na- tiural batting and base-running | speed. Rice is the only left hand- otty & ed hitter of the {hree. [ X Another disciple of swat on I whom the Detroit management is resting its hopes is Charléy Gehr Inger, hard hitting young infielde: | wht walloped .317 last season be-| | sides helping Detroit lead the league in double plays. Movies s L ye &enes SYDNEY, 9! the um- un- olor ma- s and Australia, April pictures, but they detest women to “neck.” official, told memhers of a fed- of primitive people like the abor-| Pacific Islands. “After having seen a movie hero shooting up a western town on horseback,” Beckett reported, “my aboriginal boys took my volvers, mounted my horses and rode around the bush shooting up kangaroos and emus. They fired could not get hetter targets.” Police and Judge On What Offends ROME, April 9—Francesco Pier- ono was haled into court for dis- orals B T l‘) other ultra modern foreign pub- atullg lt Heations on his news kiosk' in the | heart of the city’s. tourist center. . Officers who made the arrests juidged the publications on their iAustrations and charged Pierono with violating Article 112 of the public security law, which penal. izes the sale' of printed matter of- fensive to good taste and public morals. After Prosecutor Fornari had read translations of the French texts of the publications he pro- nounced them ~ harmless. The judge dismissed the case and there was much comment in the court room by lawyers who ex- pressed the opinion that visitors who see the frescoes at Pompeli and throng the beach at The Lido are not likely to. be offended by the scamt attire of women shown in French {llustrated papers. *ll_lliIllllllmlllfiIIIMlIlnlliilllfiill fi'l in the Ameri-|: ), 1927 leader; Jaserunner obtained with miniature desi ~=New Taking the field at home, Octo- g ber 2, the last day of the season, —— Athletics. When the dust of two hard but victerious games with the Cleveland fans lifted Hefl- |2 mann topped mmens by six points with a season average of -398 and held the crown for the fourth time. To do it he walloped out the amazing total of two home runs, three doubles Wfl‘! “‘mfl jand two singles for seven hits in | nine times up while Simmons was making two in five at Wulh‘- lun Heilmann, although 34, has ve- ported in prime condition armed |4 with 8 dozen mew bats and the | re-| { Maine, into the air or at posts when they | playing La Vie Parisienne and| |give him five championships and| deal | is being built| into & veritable Cobb on the basos, | pounds overweight, but the dan-| l Australian aborigines walk scores ary War stamps in the last two of miles to sée wild west movie|vears,” love | Says. scenes in the cinema because rhov* Bell Memorial stamp for the Phil- consider it uncivilized for men and | ;l‘dellnhhl ' ad James R. Beckett, a government|two cent stamp and the Burgoyne eral commission, investigating the| the motion picture industry of Aus- fifinmv issued last year for the an- tralia, that the films generally had | Riversary a detrimental effect on the minds ' Vermont igines here and the natives of the ary battles recommended for sp: | | possibly be stretched to l’IF1 F()R SPEC[AL .ST4MP IbSUEb W AMP POSTOFFICE, NEW DECLARES WASHINGTON, the half dozen s for mnew special April 9 Unless bills before con postage stamps Y appropriations and are made mandatory upon the postoffice department, they ecan not be acted upon even if passed Postmaster General Harry § New declares that “any more is sues would overtax the facilities of the bureau of printing and em graving and could not be handled with the present appropriations.’ “The United States government already issues more stamps than any other government,” he points out, “and I have applications for more than 30 new commemorative issues on my ‘desk now.” The 30 applications include six that have been introduced in the form of resolutions in congress Two are from Pennsylvania, ask ing for new stamps commemora: tive of the hundred and fiftieth anniversary of Washington's en campment at Valley Forge and the centennial of the first run made by a steam locomotive in America at Honesdale, Pa., in 1829, Two more are from New Jersey, one for a whole serfes of new stamps commemorative of Col Lindbergh’'s trans-Atlantic flight and one as a memorial of the Bat tle of Monmouth. A George Rogers Clark stam:; would be authorized by a resolu tion introduced by Representative Hogg of Indiana, and the sesqui centennial of the founding of the state of New York would ba me. morialized by a stamp autherized in a resolution from Senator Wag- \mer of that state. “We have jssued six Revolution- the Postmaster General “In addition to the Liberty Sesqui-Centennial, we the Battle of White pmmsl Campaign series, Vermont not to mention sesqui-centennial of the Independence ‘of In addition to other Revolution-| jcial stamp memorials by patriot | citizens, there are suggestions for | commemoration of such varied events as the discovery of Hawali, the sinking of the battleship the founding of Kingston, the opening of the Peace bridge across the Niagara river and the| Ter-Centenary of Massachusetts. Individuals whose picture would appear on commemorating stamps if the applications were granted constitute a heterogeneous group, including Luther Burbank, Com- mander Byrd, the negro educator, Fred Douglas, and Baron von Steuben, The present postoffice appropri- ation of $7,900,000 will have to cover the expense of issuing somé | 18,000,000,000 stamps and cannot include any more than the two commem- orative issues already made from it, Robert S. Regar, third assistant postmaster general in charge of finances, declares. Any profit made from the sale of spacial is- sues, moreover, he added, goes back into the gemeral fund paid into the treasury, and could not be used to cover the very consid- erable expense of production. ATTENTION MASONS There will be a stated com- munication of Mt. Juneau Lodge No. 147, F. & A. M, in Odd Fellows’ Hall at 7:30 this even- ing. Visiting Brethren cordially invited. By order of the W, M. | chickies . Mrs.. Audalie Chenard;. G, PARIS — Sea-green georgette embrofdered with rings of copper wnd gold thread is used by Len'ef lor an evening dress with a side The wide, d¥aped girdle per color and gold metal he neckline falls in a slight drape which harmonizes with the soft blouse of the cor- sage. AT ST. MANY, Easter celebration at St. Ann's hospital began with br;akla_m when gay little baskets with and eggs appeared on each tray and at each place at! a table, so that every patient, nurse and Sister was remembercd | by the famous “Easter Bunnje." ! The observance of the day did | not stop with the baskets, for all of the cakes, cookies and ice creams werg arranged in the shape of bunnies or chicks. Friends of the hospital were moest generous in theéir gifts of flowers, plants and candy, and the chapel and the corridors were beautifully decorated with the lilies, hyacinths and tullps which had arrived in profusion. Among those by whom the hos- pital was remembered are Judge and Mrs. Frank A. Boyls, Mrs. T. M. Reed, Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Mul- len, Mrs. E..J. Rodenberg, Dr. and Mrs. E. H. Kaser, Miss Minnie Field, My. and Mrs. John Marshall, Mrs. Kearsley, Mr. and Mrs. L. E, Smith, Mrs; J, M, Giovangtti, Mrs. Lioyd Ritter, Miss ‘Nota. Uarter, Mrs, M. D, Berry, Mrsl.R. ‘C.. Lowe, .B. Rice, Mis. W. J. Pigg, Mrs; H. R Van- derleest, Billy Lowe, the nursing stalf and speyuls, the Rey. J. F. Hayes and' tHe Juneaw Florists. ' “With ecatarrh in my eyes, .1 use LAVOPTIK regularly. It cools and ‘soothes and ithe eyes feel clear and refreshed. — M. Brandt. LAVOPTIK soothing. inflammation surprisingly quick. Makes tired and weak eyes feel strong and fresh. Eye cup free, is mild and yery CHAS. E. NAGHE",, Secretary. Butler, Mauro Drug Co., 96 Front Street. —adv.l mum|m|nm|pnlmnmmmmnmnmnmmnmmmmu ew Wash Dresses WITH A GREAT CHORUS OF TANTALIZING BASQUES— Richly Hand Embroidered Models—and Tailored Styles For The Mamm J L $ 4,.95 | Peautiful, Fast:Calor Materials Vivid Prints in the newest, bold patterns— § Dainty Printed Dnmlty—ahm Printed Batistes Woven Tissues ‘Beautifal Chintz Prints Trims of hite and Pastel Colored Dimity, Batiste lnd mdy ypnmnauchafim quamwabrmumwhfim Anna Webster, Dr. Anna B. | Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. HARDWARE and UNDERTAKING PHONE 12 VOTE FOR Bartley Howard Landidgte for Republican Nomination as Delegate to Congress PRIMARY. ELECTION, APRIL 24 NEW SHIPMENT Craig Kadota Figs in Pure California Wine ALSO Craig Fruit Cocktail in Pure California Wine CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 “Best in Everything” —_— S ——— ottt ot st et et et i Alaska Steam Laundry “SERVICE and QUALITY” We Can Prove It DRY CLEANING PHONE 15 PRESSING New s A Painless Permanent Wave The New Frederic’s Vita-Tonic Compousd Is the J\zswer AT TERRELL’S—$15.00 | | | g It helps eye pains and | (= Another New Shipment of CALCIMINE ARRIVED ON THE LAST ‘BOAT Fine assortment of colors and tints Select yours new smm METAL and FLUMBING I m WQB.RY Awhm:-h#’wmu#pr

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