The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 19, 1928, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: Rain and Friday; south- | casterly winds. warmer tonight and moderate LOCAL DATA Barom. Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 29.88 42 42 SE 7 Cldy 29.87 36 64 E 1 Cldy .29.85 41 77 SE 11 Cldy CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS I “TODAY Tignest Soo | dok Enpvelsty Bes. weather _ 28 iy T T 26 . 12 0 Clear 10 : | 26 30 10 0 34 | 8 18 0 36 18 22 0 Eagle N ] -2 28 0 St. Paul . 30 28 28 .24 Dutch Harbor.. 46 34 38 Kodiak ... 32 36 Cordova . 34 38 34 37 Time— 4 p. m. yest'y 4 a. m. today Noon today. . Stations— Nome Bethel Fort Yukon ... Tanana Cles Clear Clear Snow Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy Showers Pt. Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clear .10 .10 Trace .28 18 .02 0 . 44 . 42 b1 52 26 50 52 62 i n o Ketchikan ... Prince Rupert Edmonton ....... Seattle Portland ......... San Francisco.. 14 40 10 NOTE.—Observations at Dutch Harbor, Kodiak, Juneau, | Prince Rupert, Edmonton, Seattle, Portland and San Francisco are made at 4 a. m. and 4 p. m, Juneau time. WEATHER CONDITIONS The pressure is low in Southern Bering Sea and high off the Caliofrnia coast. It is falling rapidly in the Gulf of Al- aska and in the North Pacific States. Light precipitation is re- ported along the ocast from southern Bering Sea to Oregon. Tem- peratures have risen at nearly all Alaskan stations, although a minimum below zero is reported from Eagle. Temperatures near the Pacific Coast generaly rema ined above freezing. DOUGLAS NEWS DOUGLAS REPRESENTATIVES LEAVING FOR PETERSBURG Miss Madeline Riedi, who was chosen to represent the Douglas High School in the declamatory meet, to be held in Petersburg, is leaving this evening on the Ad miral Watson, accompanied by Miss Gladys Fleming. The con- test is to take place on Saturday evening. The representatives wil! then return home on the Admiral Rogers due Sunday night or Mon- day. .. — HOME FROM HOSPITAL Miss Helen Lindstrom, who wag operated on for appendicitis aboul ten days ago, returned home yes terday to complete her recupera tion before going back to her school at Gustavus where she has been teaching this winter. FORMER DOUGLAS GIRL NEAR DEATH'S DOOR Word was received in the mail here yesterday from Miss Ethel Sargeant of the very serious ill- ness of her sister, Mrs. Carl Lutt. ropp at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sargeant in Sheridan, Oregon. So critical was her condition that she was not expected to survive. ——e— VISITING PARENTS Mrs. H. C. Helmes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. August Aalto, arriv- ed here from Bremerton on the Yukon yesterday, and will visit with her parents here for a time before leaving to rejoin her hus- band on St. Paul Island.s —————— ELSTEAD-SOBERG NUPTIALS Sam Elstead and Miss Ida So- herg, both of Juneau, were mar- mnled here at 7 o'clock by United $tates Commissioner Charles Sey at the latter’s home. Miss Eliza beth Sey and Mrs. Chas. Sey wit- nessed the ceremony. Mr. EI- stead is a miner at the Alaska Ju- neau mine. The cquple will make their home in Juneau. —————— FIRE MEETING TONIGHT “The Douglas Fire Departmenl will hold a meeting tonight at the regular hour at which officers will be nominated and elected. A so- cigl time will follow the business session and all members are ex- pected to tirn out. AT THE HOTELS Gastineau Charles W. Wilson, city; Frank Scully, Seattle; J. J. Meherin, clty; Evan Jones, 'Anchorage; D B. Roberts, Anchorage; Mr. and Mrs. Bolyan and' son; John Ti- alens, M. H. Lynch, Anchorage; Jack Tritt, city. Alaskan M. Ciurla, Seattle; Miss Jennie Johnson, Yakutat; Miss Louise Kadeetoo, Yakutat; Mrs. Peterson and son, Y_lkuut; R. L. Davis, city. n Zynda M. J. Coyne and wife, Fair- banks; Mrs. Peterson, Fred Spach, Anchorage. Ga reoers oo e BEpe FORGET-ME-NOT | TEA ROOMS | Special tention given to | luncheons, dinners and ban- quets. Chicken dinner every ‘Thursday night. Mrs. Kath- _erine Hooker, Phone 157. [NEW COMPANY FORMED FOR HYDER DISTRICT Articles of incorporation of the | Butte-Hyder Mining Company | were filed today in the office of the Secretary of Ala. corporators are all S but the company is or der the Territorial statute. corporation The company, it is understood, is interested in property in the Portland Canal district. Its prin- cipal business in Alaska is located at Hyder while company head- quarters are in Seattle. A capi- tal stock issue of 1,000,000 shares each having a par value of §1 is authorized. Incorporators are: Boulton, Rodney G. Henry G. Boulton. With them Paul Denhart and O. E. Sauter, also of Seattle, were elected to serve as a board of directors for the current year. UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE ANCHORAGE, ALASKA. U. S. NON-MINERAL SURVEY No. 1657 Serial No. 06519 NOTICE OF APPLICATION IN THE MATTER OF THE AP- PLICATION of the DEEP SEA SALMON COMPANY, a corpor- ation, for leave to enter and purchase a tract of land, con- sisting of 14.36 acres, as a trade and manufacturing site, located on Chichagoff Island, Territory of Alaska. Notice is hereby given that the Deep Sea Salmon Company, a cor- poration, duly organized and ex- isting under the laws of the State of Washington, and qualified to engage in business in the Terri- tory of Alaska and in the State of Washington, and whose Alas- kan post office address is Port Althorp, Alaska, and whose { Washington post office address is Colman Building, Seattle, Wash- ington, has filed its application in the United States Land Office in Anchorage, Alaska, to purchase and en’:;r upon as a Trade and Manufacturing Site the lands em-+ braced in U. 8. Non-Mineral Sur- vey No. 1657, which are situated on the west shore of Port Al- thorp, Chichagoff Island, in the Territory of Alaska, one and three quarter miles southeast of Point Lucan, Latitude 58° 7* 50" North, Longitude 136° 20’ 00~ west, containing 14.36 acres. and more particularly described as follows, to-wit: Commencing at Corner No. 1, on mean high tide line on west shore of Port Althorp, Alaska, whence U. 8. L. M. No. 1657 bears south 16° 58" 24” cast 16.24 chains dis- tant; thence west 20.30 chains to Corner No. 2; thence North 11.18 chains to Corner No. 8; thence East 6.85 chains to Corner No. 4; thence, meandering the mean high tide line on west shore of Port Althorp, Alaska, south 26° 59 East 3.48 chains, South 45° 30’ East 3.25 chains, South 82° 45’ East 3.33 chains, South 31° 18’ East 3.75 chains, North 86° 56’ East 3.18 chains; South 67° 04’ East 1.05 chains, South 13° 20’ East 1.44 chains, South 18° 30’ West 0.58 chains, to Corner No 1, the place of beginning. Declination 31° 30’ Bast. Any and all persons claiming any portion of the above described tract are gequired to file in the ‘gud,éggu Land Office, at Ane. J. Carew Sargent, and BARNE§ GOOGLE AND SPARK PLfiG @omvmrew UNAWARE oF THE DESPERATE SiTuATION (N WHICH BARNEY HWAS BEEN PLACED BY BOSS SPIDER , OFFICIALS AT THE BILNGOAT HEADQUARTERS HAVE CALLED A 'SECRET CONFEREACE To SELECT A RUNNING MATE For THER PRESIOEATAL CANDIDATE MEANWHILE . BARNEY IS RAKING s BRAINS To EIND SomE way ouT oF HIS ENFORCED Allianice Wiy The NOTORIOUS BOSS SPIDER® @ €0 HuGHE s ool 8 or o SHAS FREO Howe b TuoMpsoN RewzensTein WHY MR.GOOGLE , IF WE'D KNOWAL U WERE SO ILL WE WouLpAT HAVE INSISTED HERE - TARE A LOOK AWFULLY ¢ THE CANDIDATE AND ALL WE AEED NOW 1S NOUR. ENDORSEME N THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1928. QF THE U.S N NOUR COMIN G- P OF WAT ALE ~WE € FOR VICE-PRE SIDENT THAT WiILL Olwy TAE A MINUTE THEN Tuw S& THAT OSNE OF = BONS s . | HoRsE FEATHERS By BILLE DE BECK SHAKE HANDS WITH SAILOR SHULLTZ S MARVLAND BARNEY = \WE AlL AGREED THAT HE LI MAKE AN EKCVEELLENT RUNNING MATE FoRr STUDEBAKER. The Great Independent ffers Worlds Champion Performance - atl no premium in first cost or upkeep! COMMANDER. 1495 f.o. b. factory 1 25000 MILES in less than 23000 Mmui'ns OU may have wanted to own The Commander, but felt you could not afford it. You may not know that, due to Stu- debaker’s One-Profit facilities of manufacture, you can now buy this World’'s Champion car at the exceptional price of $1495, f. o. b. factory. (- At this low, One-Profit price The Commander not only repre- sents a value unequaled in auto- mobile history, but its upkeep is equally economical. In 61 tests conducted in 61 citiesthe country over,The Com- mander averaged 17Y% miles to the gnflon of gas—economical to operate! And factory repair parts sales for Studebaker cars during 1927 were less than $8 per car Studebaker—The Great Independent—bas 76 years’ experience in quality manufacture Junean Motors, Inc. H. I. LUCAS, Manager in operatipn —low maintenance! The world champion stamina of The Commander was spectacu-~ larly proved when two stock Commanders each traveled 25,000 miles in less than 23,000 consec- utive minutes. Nothing else on earth ever ran so far so fast! Remember—you pay no pre- mium for this Championship performance in this Studebaker quality car. The Commander at $1495, f. 0. b. factory, is not’only the greatest achievement of post war automotive engineering, but motordom’s biggest value! I === PRICES (1. . b factorien) |_65 | s1195 to 81295 L Six [ 62 | s195t0 soes . ! NENANA ICE POOL | guessea tnat tnere wourd be CLOSES WITH $83,000| early breakup. Those who pre . «|dicted a late season were taking {The Nenana Ice Pool that closed| what comfort they could get out il 16 will break the record for of the fact of cold nights. It was estimated that the PRASIIERG ik S an | PLAN FOR HOSPITAL DAY ,| was released yesterday on posting 11 $200 bail. A meeting of the graduate nurdes in Juneau, and the wives of the doctors, was held at St. Ann'g hospital this afternoon at | ——————— ; SEWARDITES JOIN ELKS | A team of Anchorage Elks, at rage, ~ Alaska,” their M’m claim or claims during the ! of publication, or within (30) days thereafter. - . [ DA at Anchorage, Alaska, this 7th day of April, 1928. J. LINDLEY GREEN, gfoss recelpts will amount to $63, thirty | 000 and all except the bare costs 3 of the management will go to the person making the nearest guess on the time the ice of the Tanana River will break up in fromt of Register, U. 8. Land Office. | that town. o First publication, April 12, 1928.| Thawing weather at Nenana last Last publication, June 14, 1928.]week heartened those Who had i 3 o'clock to discuss and plan for the Hospital Day .entertalnment on May 12, — e — .. RELEASED ON BAIL BIDS CALLED FOR Bids are herewith solicited for the repair of the foundation of the Eagles’ Hall, Douglas. Speci- fications on work to be done can be secured at Guy's Drug Store. Bids will on April 22. adv, ‘Harry Johnson, who was arrest: ed and charged with assault in the 8. Commissioner’s Court. headed by Exalted Ruler Ed Mon. an, went to Seward recently and’ Initiated a class of ten Sewardites | into the Elks Lodge. — e Huh! ; “Another also ran,” sighed the| flapper as she cast her best silk OK-MNX .MR.GOAGLE ~Eye - GOT_THE WHOLE NQEY m THEIR NANNIES (N 3 BACK OF US = Save today and you won’t have to slave tomorrow SAVINGS FOR THE LITTLE SHAVERS Homes are. better where there are kiddies—kiddies are better where there are savings and savings are %)cttl:‘r where there is one of our little home savings hanks. . Get one for your boy or girl and shcw them what its for, by example! First National Bunk “There is no Substitute for Safety” The Paint for QUALITY and Rogers Bruéliing dequer THE Thomas Hardware o Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc —Lumber For Every Purpose— Your Lumber Needs Promptly Supplied From Our Complete Stock of SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK LUMBER We handle Cement, Lime, Shingles, Lath A FULL LINE OF Fancy and Staple Groceries: FRESH FRUIT and VEGETABLES You'll have to go miles to beat our prices. WE DELIVER ANY TIME BELMONT GROCE oo rooo RADIO NEW SUPPLY OF RADIO “B” BATTERIES JUST ARRIVED—WE DELIVER s 10ld Papers for sale at Empire Offi

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