The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 17, 1928, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL .17, : 1928. - i By GEORGE McMANUS e & ~ BRINGING UP FATHER YOU HEARD WHAT 1| HAID - YOU ARE COING TO LEARN HOW TO DANCE - | EXPECT - MR- AL: AGRETTO THE DANCING TEACHER HERE ANY MINUTE e e P THE BIGGER AND BETTER CHEVROLET CARS Landaus, Sedans, Coupes, Coaches and 766+ 767- 768- 79~ 770- 771 - IF HE OON'T OBEY NOUL - PROFESSOR- ONE - TWO" THREE THATS RICGHT- ¥y 99 NOw- JUST DO A% | DO - COUNT | ). VR~ FIVE - | dc Carbriolets have ARRIVED Place your order now for one of those wonderful creations, the world’s most luxurious low-priced automobile | HOPE HE BREAKS HISLEG ON HIS Connors Motor Company Service Rendered by Experts © 428, by Int') Festuws Servion v... Great Britain nights reswrved e’ In Convenient Sized Packages 8 pound, 4 pound, 2 pound Pails and One Pound Cartons FRYE-BRUHN COMPANY QUALITY MEATS BEFORE THEM! 1 — . PORTLAND AT | » - HOME TODAY| First Games of Season to Be Played in North- west This Afternoon The New Essex Super-Six This Essex Super-Six high compression motor is bunt by the nudson Motor Car Co. under Hudson patents. So far as known, it is the most powerful and efficient motor of its size in the world. It is a true Super- Your first glax will tell you the beauty and attractiven of Essex bodies—and this motor is typical of the outstanding value which is built into every detail of Essex. Extra large tires—Bendix 4-wheel brakes—8-inch frame— finest steering wheel and gear—finish and equipment complete. World’s Greatest Value— Altegether or Part by Part Essex Coach $735, Coupe $745 (Rumble Seat $30 Extra), Sedan $795. All prices F. O. B. Detrolt plus war excise tax. McCaul’s Garage The first games of the baseball season will be played in the Northwest this afternoon when Hollywood plays at Seattle and the Mission club at Portland. The four teams were traveling yester- day to open on the schedule thir afternoon. Other games scheduled for thi: afternoon in the league are Oak- land at San Francisco and Sac- ramento at Los Angeles. In games played yesterday in the National League the four leading clubs were defeated by the second class and Boston won its first game of the season. In the American League, Chi- cago, tailenders up to yesterday, won the first game administer- ing the first defeat to St. Louis and rubbed it in by a shut-out ‘score. FINE FAMILY FUEL for those wise enough to ordes their coal and kindling here, Have us deliver you at yowm address and note how mueh better heat and cleaner firex you hat ‘Wouldn’t ask you to do this 1t cost more. It doesm’t. 1t \aally costs less an¢ the tria) will prove it. We carry a full ine of Feeds D. B. FEMMER | Phone 114 national Bowling Assoclation in St. Paul, Minn. Left to right, front row: Andy Guzy, Jack Olson. Left to right, back row: Charley Wolf, Leo Mueller and Jimmy Dolan, Congrats, boys! ) (International Newsreel) Hlere's the Andrews Hotel bowling team of Minne- apolls, Minn, which is belleved to have rolled the tournament score ever made during an out- g event when the quintet shot 3,204 to capture I ®ist roney in the five-man contest of the Inter- [ on the Perfumers Launch Male Beauty Drive PARIS, April 17-—The perfum- org of Paris, having conquered the feminine world, would like to in- duce the male of the species to use more hottles of sweet-smelling liquids, more boxes of powder, and even rouge. In order to induce men to make themselves more beautiful, one of the principal Paris perfumers de- votes half of his show window to creations “pour Monsieur.” There are face powders as well as tal cum, creams of sundry shades and scents, perfumes and all sorts of lotions. ticipate has: not yet{ been decided. The South African athletes will “nciude also a- boxing team of | (eight men and three reserves, a | sculler, four wrestle: !and track athletes, two water polo teams, one composed of seven men and the other five women, three women swimmers and four men swimmers. — - — SPORTS ARE PICTURED ON NEW DUTCH STAMPS wrestlers .and, a Scotchman the football players. There will be no wonmen among urkey's Olympic delegate .- CANAUA REMOVES CHANGE ON TOURIST SPOR: GEAR GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League No games, teams traveiing. National League Chicago 6; St. Louis 3. Philadelphia 7; New York 5. Pittsburgh 8; Cincinnati 1. Boston 3; Brooklyn 2. American Leagu St. Louis 0; Chicago 7. New York 7; Botson 2. Cleveland 5; Detroit 4. Washington 5; Philadelphia 4. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast Leagu ‘Won Lnes! Pet. e % L 786 10 714 9 643 .500 500 357 .286 214 22 cy MAKE NO MISTAKE We Save You 10% to 25% “We tell you what your job will cost” PLUMBING HEATING REPAIRING STEVE STANWORTH CO., Archway Shop Phone 589 Open Eveni e San Francisco Sacramento . Hollywood Los Angeles Oakland Portland Mission . Seattle “EVERYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY” Photostat and Blue Print Service MASTER PHOTO FINISHERS WINTER & POND CO. A IO 1 Al ANOTHER CATCHER 0 11 e WzE“Lost Pe. .600 .600 .600 500 ¢ 500 400 500 250 7 7 5 4 | 3 1 National St. Louis .. New York Cincinnati Chicago . Brooklyn Pittsburgh Philadelphia Frigidaire and Delco Light SALES AND SERVICE W. P. JOHNSON You wouldn’t cuss your 1914 flivver because you couldn't step it up to 90 miles an hour. You'd buy a later and bet- ter car if you wanted to go that fast. THEN WHY EXPECT TO GET A HIGH POWERED HEATING SERVICE FROM A LOW POWERED FURNACE THAT EITHER YOU OR THE WIFE MUST NURSE. AND CODDLE. THERE 1S A SIZE FOR EVERY HEATING NEED' IN THE ELECTROL BURNER. Le 3 .3 3 3 2 2 2 1 PHONE 1 Lost Pet. 0 1.000 1 .800 .800 -800 —_— NORTHERN HOTEL ican Won New York 3 St. Louis . Cleveland . ‘Washington f"HfHRIUI‘ Y16 ' CITY OF 15,000 ON LEASED LAND l MAY BE RAZED ON 30 DAYS NOTICE | PICHER, Okla, April 11-1'm.~l | eity of 15,000 inhabitants is buil | 'on leased land, which belongs to, the Quapaw Indians. | ] Zinc and lead mining compau-| |ies which leased the land fmmi | the Indians and then sub-leasod the surface rights for buildin ‘ — ! purposes, can order on 30 days'| SAN FRANCISCO, April 17 ! notice the removal of homes, hos.| She might have married anything | pitals, schools and business | from a buck private to a major. | houses. And these companies oc | It wasn’t the fault of any of the | casionally exercise their power of | marines between these ranks thet leviction. Only a few days ago|she didn’'t. Plenty “200 or one of them ordered the clearing!asked her. H lof 30 homes from two squaie' The “she” in question i§ Migs blocks. The corporation waats Laura Wheeler. The marines the ground for use in re-milling above mentioned are the boys sta waste rock that contains minerals. tioned at Shanghai The Quapaws are not permitted | Miss Wheeler went to China to| to sell their land until 1946, al-| sing at a club there. It is a club though a special dispensation by patronized by men of the United the. secretary of the interior al-|States marine corps. lows them to sell surface rights| But let her tell the story: in fee. But the Indians, content| “I med to get by big, mnot with high rentals, place almos: only an entertainer, but as prohibitive prices on their hold-| matrimonial possibility, because ings. Besides, their lots are ex- nearly every nizht one or more of empt from taxation. the soldier boys proposed to me. { Because the Indian land is tax| “Privates, corporals, sergeants free, public improvements, such and, yes, even wearers of Sani as, paving, cannot be financed Brown belts, ‘popped the question. | through assessments as in oln:r; “And perhaps—mind, perhaps—I cities. When Main street was|would have a marine for a hus. | paved, the business men dug down band right now, excepting that I {in their pockets for the money. |just had to come home single be- Despite the handicaps placed on|cause— the owning of property, Picher “Well, the marines are fine and has grown in less than a decade|I'm for them, but there is some !from a mining camp to a city of|one right here in San Francisco |the first class. It had its begin-| who's fine, too.” yning in 1914 when a drill rig be Miss Wheeler returned |ing moved from. the Webb City,|Shinyo Maru. Mo, zine and lead field to the | Commerce, Okla., field was mired sy 3 ST jin the mud. Unable to go farth- SAMMY BAKER. IS 4 ter, ‘the driller, Jess Short, set up i # his rig and began prospecting. He WINNER OF BOUT I sthuck a rich vein of ore. | In the lingo of the mines, the NEW YORK, April 17—Sa lore is called “jack,” and thuy Baker, Mitchell Field soldier, !l’iulu'r is the city that “jack” night won a slugging match, built. The town was named after round bout, from Billy Alzie, — | the late O. 8. Picher, president of zona baker, and challenger for Hu-:’ OTTAWA, Can,, April 17--Bona ! a mining company. Ore produced welterweight title. | fide tourists henceforth will be|here last year was worth $36,000,- —ati { permitted to bring their sporting! 000, | gear or cameras into Canada with-| B | TWO AMERICANS COAGH out leaving a deposit on account| " TURKS FOR OLYMPICS| of (eir dutiable value with thel 1¢ you " L G AMSTERDAM, Holland, April e : | Canadian customs officials at the|pione 498. Hardy Andy’s Shop. 17—All the popular sports are rep-| AN-UIL\.v Turkey .\m'l! by | |A. P. LAGERGREN, Prop. adv. resented on a set of special] Turkey, which participated in the revision of the customs | “Dutch Olympic” postage stamps.|Olympic games for the first timo|rogulations has brought about this o1d papers for sale at The Bmpire. The one portraying a boxer is of jin 1924, will have a team of be | change. B the largest denomination. jtween 60 and 70 athletes in th At present it will affect pax The new stamps are: 13 cents, g8ames at Amsterdam this sum.!ticularly the Pacific Coast, where dark green, showing the figure of mer. | golf and spring sports are in ful. an’ oarsman; 2 cents, violet, a|, The new republic will partici- swing. | fencer; 3 cents, light green, a|pate in football, fencing, boxing, football player; 5 cents, light! bicycling, track and field, wres. blue, a sailing yacht; 714 cents,'tling and weight lifting. Its best orange, a weight putter; 10 cemg,’chumze apparently is in football. PALMETTO, Fla., April 17 red; a runner; 15-cents, datk blue,| The track team has been coach-| Frank Pytlak, a Buffalo sandlot a horseman, and 30 cents, brown,|ed by two Americans, Chester To-|ter, has shown well behind the a boxer. bin, athletic director of the Con-|bat and the Buffalo Bisons wiil —_———eo——— stantinople Y. M. C. A, and Myron | keep a string on him. CROWS DIG DIVOTS Black, secretary of the American —_————— RICKMANSWORTH, Eng., April| chamber of commerce at Constan-| We call ane® aenver. Phone 528. ) 17—Mystery surrounding the ap.| tinople. A Hungarian trains the LET Almquist Press Your Suit. pearance of hundreds of gaping | wounds in the velvet turf of the Sand Lodge Golf club links has been solved, but only after indig- nant reprimands to members for their “carelessness” had been posted on the bulletin board. It was found the holes were caused by crows which tore away re- .250 .300 167 .000 Chicago Boston Detroit Philadelphia TWO MEN RACING ARGUND THE WORLD SAN FRANCISCO, April 17-- Toichiro Araki, racing around the world from Tokyo has arrived in San Francisco from Seattle on the Cascade Limited. He is prepared for his next hop to Chicago by an air mail plane. Traveling across Siberia, Mat. 1 1 3 4 5 3 placed divots in their search for food. ———————— It makes father as mad to stand around at a formal function and see mother in a gown one degree removed from a September Morn, smirking and chattering with a lot of dumbbells, as it does mother to go to a ball game with him and see him sitting in his shirt sleeves and bobbing up and down yelling like a lunatic at players he doesn't know from Adam. TAXICAB THE PRESIDENT Phone 257. This fine car cost sui, Araki's competitor, 15 g0INg|more but nothing too good for around the world in the opposite|my patrons. The ““President” will direction and is scheduled to ar-'p1ease the most fastidious. rive at Moscow on April 23. Robert Leslie (Bob) Turner. adv. AR S : - SOUTH AFRICANS PLAN "OLYMPIC TEAM OF 80 JOHANNESBURG, o Ca, April 17—South Africa will ,fluenwd in the Olympic gamee 1 summer at Amsterdam by * about 60 athletes, one of whom is William Hertzog, son of the prime ~ minister. Young Hertzog Is -I runner. The team includes the first girl Tunners ever to represent the _country in the Olympics. They . 01d papers for sa1e at -The Empire. F OFE LODGE MEETING ENTERTAINMENT L O, O. F. Hall, Juneaun WEDNESDAY NIGHT 7:30—APRIL 18 Snappy Peppy Mirthful South Afri-} be! Every Month in the Year!. 1928 SALES DATES f 19 0Oc 24 November ’1 April 25 é:fi"‘ 22 2 Spectal Sales on Request of Advance Made on Shipments Requested SEATTLE ¥ 1AR! Harri Machine Shop “Where Best Always Prevails” Plumbing, Heating, Sheet Metal Work, Oil Burners “BETTER BE SAFE THAN TO BE SORRY” WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION INSURANCE ROOMS—50 cents per night and up: $3.00 per week cad wp. Public shower and tub baths 50 cents. Ray Oil Burner in operation—Hot water day and night. Rooms $12.00 per month and up—steam heated Studebaker Sales Break All-Time Records Both January and February Set New High Marks in Purchases by the Public SOUTH BEND, Ind.,, March 5.—The number of Stude- Workmen’s Compensation Insurance Affects all employers of labor having a payroll of five or more. We write - policies protecting you from claims . arising under this law in limits of $9,000—$18,000 For a small initial premium with the balance payable at ‘the end of the policy year. A copy of the law will be sent upon request. ~ ALLEN SHATTUCK, Inc. INSURANCE—REAL ESTATE baker and Erskine cars delivered to retail purchasers durirg the month just closed was the largest of any February in Studebaker history. Deliveries for February, 128, exceed- ed the same month last year by 31 per cent. Studebaker deliveries for January also set-a new high mark. Call at Juneau Motors, Inc., and see the reason for this increase in sales. We have the reason. JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc.

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