The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 17, 1928, Page 7

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{ _ Althorp, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE THURSDAY MAY 17, |928 Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Jupeau and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: Rain tonight and Friday; fresh southeasterly winds LOCAL DATA Time— 4 p. m. yest'y...3001 4 a. m. today. 29.94 Nocn today 29.94 47 41 45 Barom. Temp. Humidity Wéu]z:d Velocity Weather Cldy Rain Rain 73 92 94 16 SE 8 SE 8 CABLE AND RADIO REPURTS YESTERDAY | Highest 8 pm. | Stations— temp, __temp. TOAT T Low S$a.m. §am. Precip. temp. temp. Veloclly 24 hrs. vm.um Nome podi | | 52 Bethel . 54 Fort Yukon ... 52 Tanana . 66 Eagle 56 St. Paul 32 Dutch Harbor.. 50 Kodiak 40 Cerdova 48 Juneau .. Ketchikan . Princc Rupert.. Edmonten ... Seattle Fortland ... San’ Francisce.. 50 Clear 46 Pt. !lil\ Rain Rain Rain Rain Clear Cldy Pt. Cldy 0 Pt. Clay —-Lesa than 10 miles NOTE.—Observations at Dutech Harbor, Prince Rupert, Edmonton, Seat are made at 4 a. m. and 4 p. The pressure remains low throughout point near the Alaska Peninsu lumbia to Oregon. ing Sea and the Interior. Islands. | rather warm in the lower Tana Bulu Rain has been and British. Columbia and fair weather prevails c Témperatures the extremié west but remain about Last night was cgld cver most of the Intericr but was Kodiak, Juneau, tle, Portland and San Francisco m., Juneau {ime. CONDITIONS Alaska with its lowest and is high from British Co- general in uthern Alaska | r most of Ber- slightly in the Pribilof la, have risen freezing in a Valley and on Seward Penin- BOBBED - HAIR BANDIT SHOWS P IN PARIS May nobbed. | ndit came to l..m e two Feminine holdup accomplishments are least one invention which French will not claim. Georgette Coffinet, aged 16, had made a flying start in the career of crime. 8he was caught in the act of robbing a small hotel, hav- ing gained entrance by crossing a roof and breaking a window. After long interviews with police she admitted several other crimes, including the hold-up of an alde 1y gentleman who had confided in her. In her i7 bag were found clip- UNITED STATES LAND ‘OFFICE ? ANCHORAGE, ALASKA. U. 8. NON-MINERAL SURYEY No. 1657 Serfai No. 0v519 OTICE OF APPLICATION THE MATTER OF THE AP- PLICATION ot the DEEP SEA HALMON COMPANY, a corpor- atlom, for leave to enter and purchase a tract of land, con- glsting of 14.36 acres, as a trade. and manufacturing site, Jocated on Chichagoft 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- v tory of ‘Alaska and in the State ol Washington, and whose Alas- kan post office address is Port Alaska, and whose Washington post office address is Colman Building, Seattle, Wash- jngton, has filed its application fin 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. S. 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 southevast of Point Lucan, Latitude 58° 7’ 50” North, Longitude 136° 20’ 00” west, containing 14.36 acres. and “ more particularly described as foilows, to-wit: Commencing at Corner No. 1, on mean high tide line on west shore of Port Althorp, Alaska, whence U. S. L. M. ‘No. 1657 bears south 16° 8’ 24" east 16.24 chains dis- tant; thence west 20.30 chaing to Corner No. 2; thence North 11.18 chains to Corner No. 3; 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° 66’ East 3.18 chains South 67° 04 East. 1.05 ins, South 13° 20’ East 144 chains, South 18° 30 West 0.58 chains, to Corner No 1, the place of beginning. ' Declination 31° 30’ East. Any and all persons claiming any portion,of the above described i are required to file in the i States Land Office, at An- Alaska, their adverse R .hm' claims during the period N catio) qr wlllln thirty & {0 mm e m‘lmh day of April, uwnm' Register, U. uumlo- 8. ma om-. April 12, 192| the | pings ne hair from American and French spapefs, concerning a “hobbed bandit from Brooklyn.” e Real Coffee and Cakes Cost Dollar in Paris PARIS, May Real Ameri can coffee with um in it, at 3 cents a cup, is a recognized money maker here A stack of hot cakes of coffee, at a dollar, sure proposition, The cost of eating, for tour ists who insist on American food in the American fashion, is go ing to be higher this summ than it has ever been before Par Griddle cakes with syrup and butter and a cup of coffee out of a sealed tin with an American lahel on it costs In the neighbor- hood of 20 francs-at the American rendezvous in the Opera district. With a few extra franes for cov- er charge and 10 pereent ‘of the bill for the waiter, the cost of | pancakes and coffee mounts to something more than one silver dollar. Real American coffee at the standardized price of seven francs a cup on the Boulevards. Corned Dbeef hash, without a poached egg, costs as high as 50 cents a plate, and a dish of stew- ed corn, considered by the French fit only to use as a. basis for thick soup or to feed to pigs, costs as much as a whole can of it does on the corn-belt side of the At- lantic. ————.——— THOUSANDS OF CORNS REMOVED We now have a remedy that really will remove ANY corn or callous quickly and without pain; we can prove it. If you are one of the unfortun- ate ones who have tried many so- called “Corn cures” and still have yoyr stubborn old Corn or Callouses—come in NOW and let us demonstrate “END-O-CORN.” { If you dive too far away write to: END-O-CORN LABORATOR- IES, 4 Garfield Blvd., Chicago,|_- who will see that you receive a jar promptly. Butler Mauro Drug Co. —adv. 17 and a cup is another — e 0id pa; papers fol « fo1 eate st The Empire Alaska Scenic Views , Fred K. Ordz De Vry Motion. Picture Equipment | Eastman Cameras, Films, Amateur Finishing | Opposite Thomas Hardware — BURFORD'S CORNER PIG'N WHISTLE CANDY None Better—Box or Bulk ) e « e e > JAPANESE TOY | SHOr B B. MARINO Front P, o.ux"a?’lfir‘ BARNEY (‘OO(,I E AND GPARI\ PLUG THOLGH BARN IMMEOIATE DA OF A HOLE LAK AR AND EQOD, THE HUGE CORMNER REACH THE CEME , ENRANCE THE A BARNEN ( EasNY ONE / AND EQUIPM FRANKLIYA, = DUNHAM 1S NOT 1M ANY DUE © € DF LGH Tc K OF R AN T TAS TONE , COVERE O ICHE ) WHERE rgmmnw, A SHHH | ALLRGHT. JE! TRe CchaINS GIT THE CROW( 2 {ROW fhe SWITCH 8 by K Great STAND BACK - 1 THOSE CHAINS ARE GONNA SNAP (o A MILLION | PIECES - | LssEN To ‘EM GROAN - THAT STONE WEIGHS MORE'N GRANY'S BREAK THE NEWS T US, MR FIREMAN S THERE MO HoPe 2 WERE N\ DO ALL WE CAN ng Features Syndicate. Tnc Britain rights reserved More Glmrd.s to Help U. S. Cut Fire Losses In National Forests The Federal Forest Service, prcpering for another season of ; protecting Naticnal timber against fire, plans an enlarged force of guards. In the mountainous ccuntry of Western National For- csts it scmetimes requires several days for rangers to reach a fire. The forces above are moving supplies to the “front.” Below is a typical burned area in a Colorado Natcnal Forest. 4 j— S i R Y WASHINGTON, May 17 Each hundred seventy-five guards and lookout w: be hired to fight 8 in the na- tional fore: as the result of a projected ircrease in the forestry | service fund. Two hazanl additional chmen will man was for an average of During the season 664 fires of al zes. “With the increass,” Colonel Greeley said, “we propose to em- ploy §210,000 for additional fire Necessity for the increase, cost- I]runul\nlvl and also for more ade- ing $276,000, was pointed out in| quate training and preparation of congressi committee hearings | the protective organizations for by Col. William B. ' C duties. The 275 additional forester. Last yes were but 2,710 guards for a total area of 158,000,000 acres, of which 91.180 000 acres car a )ngll fire respon- 34,000 there for each forest guard down from 34,000 acres to a little less than ,000 acr Out of this inrreasc GENERAL @ELECTRIC | 'OU will notice at once the roominess of the new General Electric Refrigerator. This —the smallest model—lias nlnuqnmfietol shelf arca. The freezing chamber was to take the smallest ponible ce—yet ic, makes 56 cubes of ice #¢ once. go h ietly it and ::u" o ns,wu Ww‘ Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU AND BQUGLAS ALASKA - dunesu Phone No, 6 . Douglas Phone No, 18 - : by 2| men will bring the average area viding equipment. “We terially our egq pression ting into that 000 a year no to save need at ‘iuu(-ll equipme iare able The forest fires loa trom Greeley 1 506,000 | In 1927, he {spent §1,656,0 | work clal 1 and ir ditic | than :alun or leas fire | Statistics | show that in |to put out $85 |est fire ten acres in 79 percent th each blaze a out. can control the vel. The most s which oveur | ragions, hard sometimes takes two or thr a fire time & ito get By the | trolled hug RN, WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART | Legion will meet Thursday night, | at 8 o [ May 17, Jand program. bers invited. |ed to report —adv, need to build up very purposes. in various ways, to obtain it.” 1919 id, 000,000 be fun Frequently, wh it in time, a with perhaps one and extin timely us at 7 o'clock. 528 will be employed additional monm TO JOIN CREW }FOR TIMBER SURVEY ma- quipment for fire sup- We are pu from $20,000 to § w which we are of th left Se , topographer 8. ological Su but we | Attle today on the Admiral Rog of | €rs for Juneau and will en | gaged in making topographic sur veys in this diztrict all summer He has been loaned to the U. vice for & will or survey Mr. Williams on a survey in the lIcy 4 distric He will return here in a few nd then tako the panty to Ity Island where it will co-operate with En- ‘ incer Don Wil in survey | ing timber areas to be included were presentcd to!in the lease to George T. Came- 1927 it was possiblalron and rciates, g 5 percent of the m\ | PR oot LAST AMERICAN WGMAN DROPPED he year before. The|* iy el sheahl IN 'GOLF TOURNEY sic points to report! —_— t the time ren he t $200,000 worth be nt as quickly as we to 1927 be 50 amounted Colonel} * to $1- uln f is now said, 00 i as the govornmeni | ) ail the hne: fire preve n spent a lit'! or fire fighting. tio mor: STANTON, Fngland, May Dorothy Hurd, of Phil- the last of the Ameri- s in the Dritish Women's Golf Champicnship mateh, was today and |eliminated by Miss Judith, 3 land 2 | those i e KITTEN ISLANDS ARE NOW INCLUDED IN TRAP AREAS| com erions in the of ¢ regulation s } to the scene ppleman by the De-| Cop | sued early thi partment ¢f Commerce, adds Kit- of | ten Islands, near Hawk Inlet, to and limbs, | the in which fish traps may g | ed, it was announced to-: 4 local headquarters of the. Bureau. of Fisheries. Th= | original regulation excluded these islands from the open areas, et s AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY crew ch fires a acreages of saly > trunks replacement lock. | Initiation | Hufbands of mem- Drill team request- | | i I 1 i Regular meeting Thursday even- ing, May 17, at 8 o’clock in Dug-, out. . Initiation and refreshments.| - ~mlv<| AGNES GRIGG, Secretary. The Invitation to the Wedding e Strict confprmity with the rules of etiquette pre- scribes invitations to for- mal weddings. Correctness —In every detail is assured by our long experience in this work.' Daily Algska Empire Job Printién; Department By BILLE DE BECK /Hoom‘f!'-' [ MERE (T COMES { The STONE 1S N MovinGg S If yours is a hard lot—build a house on it “SAVINGS™ IS SUCH A DRY SUBJECT! And yet, once you hegin playing the game, it is perfectly thrilling. _T'here is a peculiar fascination in seeing the sacrifices syou make reflected in dollars and cents right before your eyes. And, too, there is always the sustaining vision of a happ) famll\ with its happiness and comfort assured. First National Bunk “There is mo Substitute for Satety” LINOLEUM At present we have a large assortment of patterns. Printed Patterns—Inlajids—Battleship THE Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. —Lumber For Every Purpose— Manufacturers of Best Grade of SPRUCE and HEMLOCK LUMBER See Us for Quantity Prices xr WE HANDLE Cement, Lime, Lath, Shingles, Fire Brick, Fire Clay ALASKANS SHOULD BUY ALASKA PRODUCTS especlally when same are far better and can be bought at B9 extra cost to the consumer, RANGELL SHINGLES are’ 90% nrtlcw grain, all clear and comtain no sap or other detects. 6 TQ 2 CLEARS 5 TO 2 CLEARS 8end your orders direct to the Mill and save money. WRANGELL SHINGLE MILL WRANGELL, ALASKA “SERVICE and QUALITY” We Can Prove It \ DRY CLEANING PHONE 15 PRESSING

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