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OM-MoTHER- LET | PLEASE- PLEASE. "118_’:{” STOP GROWLING:- =] YOU GET ON MY NERVES- BRINGING UP FATHER I 1S THAT 07 WELL JLL HAVE NOU UNDERSTANG ) PLL TAKE NO BACK TALK FROM (~—=— YOU- THE 1’1 VERY 1DEA - g/ 5 OH-DEAR -OH-DEAR -1 DON'Y KNOW WHERE OUR DAUGHTER GETS HER FAULTS FROM QESN'T GET THEM FROM ME HANK GOODNE"’J%-l WE AGREE ON ™" (| ONE THING: - - M SURE SHE J- " 4 NO-YouU'Re RIGHT THERE Mi MINERS BILLED T0 PLAY VETS THIS EVENING Barring Resumption of! Rain, Ball Tossers Will Get Active Again Barring a resumption of rain fall such as has shot the City League "schedule full of holes dur- ing the past week, causing the postponement of three games in that time, the American Legion and Alaska Juneau clubs will en- gage in a sevenframe struggle on the City Park_diamond to night. promptly at 6:30 o'clock. The Vets, tied with the Moose for the leadership, with one win and no losses, have a chance to boost their standing if they can cop from the Miners. With an ove evening, Manning and his speed would be a good bet for the Vets and either he or Cunningham is expected to be on the mound The Miners, although hurt by the loss of Dud Stair, have an- other good twirler in Robertson who also clouts them far and wide. They have a good batting outfit, probably the heaviest hit- ters in the circuit. The game' to- night should be a close one and of the kind that fans can get a run for tHeir money, e, BUD TAYLOR IS VICTOR IN BOUT| CHICAGO, May 22—Bud lor defeated Joe Lucas in a 10- round bout last night. Both men are in the featherweight division. Taylor’'s disputed bantamweight crown was not at stake. — e - NORTHERN NEWS FROM MINING PUBLICATION Tay- The last Engineering and Min- ing Journal contains the follow- ing items concerning mining in the North: “Continued near Hyder, Alaska, land Canal district, partly as a result of the boom in mining stocks in Vancouver and Victoria, B. C. Amalgamated Mines, Ltd., has been organized in Vancouver to take over and develop the hold- ings of Hyder Lead Mines, which ‘ consist of the Alaska Comstock group. Lead and silver, with some zinc, are the metals present in the ore. The Border and Vir- ginia groups, on Salmon River. have been acquired hy Winnipeg interests. Another Hyder com- pany, Titian Gold Mining, is start- ing active development of the ten claims that compose the property. Gold and silver occur in the ore. “H. G. Watson, of Juneau, has purchased a plant with which to develop his placer holdings at the junction of Montana and McGin- nis creeks, in the Eagle River dis- trict. The ground will be tested for dredging. “A three-stamp mill is being in- stalled at the gold-quartz property of Clyde Brenner; in the Turn- again district, Kenai Peninsula. The gold is said to be free-mill- ing. The new mill of the Ethel mine, on Mineral Creek, west of Valdez, is expected to be in ope.- ation by June. 3 “Parts for the third dredge con- structed for Fdirbanks Explora tion by the Bethlehem Shipbuild. ing Corporation were shipped.. Alaska from San Francisco April 20. The dredge will be erected on Goldstream Creek, in the Fairbanks (Alaska) district. It is expected that the two dredges now under conmstruction will be ready for operation in July and there will be a suffi- activity is noted in the” Port- clent working season to begin ap-jof publication, or within thirty erations.” —eee—— ATTENTIOR It you neea a good carpenter phone 498. Handy Andy's Shop. A. P. LAGERGREN, Prop. adv. The game is billed to start | st sky and a resultant dark| lowing is the Coast L schedule for this week, onenir WANDSBEK, Germany, May 22 this afternoon: Portland at the Bremen on {tle; Oakland at Sacramento; Mis-| ¢ . Shown Here,” Ision at San Francisco; Hollywood ' was a placard that drew big at Los Angeles. jerowds at the annual rural fair ~ National Le here. o i 5 2 PR B Chicago 7; St. Lnuisa!\{?le | It was the or the land if ]“MANDELL DEFENDS TITIE Pittsburgh 3, 6; Cincinnati 4, 3.'§ and intere keen, so | Alaska Boxing Il ) R £, Tosme, s i i | “ Bill Is Passed | ‘IN BOUT WITH 1‘/191 ARNIN. st = 8 13 l’hlLuh-IpEn;\: On the screen were thrown pic-| i 4. - Vo res of a rocky and deep un-| | By House 4 ! - lder snow, with icebergs tloating B flowe \CHALLENGER GAME BOXER s et | | WASHINGTON, May 22— | i STANDING OF CLUBS tor's dress standing smiling be | The Houston bill to permit | | L8 T 3 s Pacific Coast League side an airplane. | 10 round boxing in Al | k \ Won Lost Perhaps it wasn't the Bremen, | | | has been passed by the House | R i [Rucramenito ;" but it might have been. One | [and sent to the Senate. ! AT e ] planc looks much Like anotier, 5o A | o >1\1|"l‘ll‘5 25 do x-lu-f*u.«..zuul any {II.III in a (e m J Y ' suit might be a Koehl or a| Pty T i Huenefeld. | | ; | So the rustics went home satis- \ Portla . 20 . |wALKER wINs IBeattle 16 33 3 fied and feeling thoroughly upto. g | date, having “seen” how the Bre- National League {men landed, less than 24 hours FUURTH RUUND i yon Lost Pelatior it happened, for a thin dime Cincinnati 22" .15 B Zia Sihpres i New York 16 ° 12 SHEPARDS LEAVE TOWORROW ‘Knocks George Smith m: Louis 20, 15 71} Mr. and Mrs. Shepard will ) Six . T . Brooklyn 17 14 18 | Jeave tomorrow en the steamer | own 1X mes In Pittsburgh 16 )0 | 4 v for Seattle on r | Third, Out in Fourth Bosten ..... 10 to Butte, Mont.,. Mrs. Shepard's | Philadelphia 6 k former home, where Shepard ELIZABETH, N. J., May 22— American League | has accepted a pesition with the | Mickey © Walers) ibwalstt R \x.un L:st Anaconda ~ Copper, Mining Coin | champion, last night knocked out Al']\inulvlnhi ¢ “1:, ,: pany ]“j"v f'x"p” foyapenc A Gedrse _ Smith, Newark . lght L adbie i few days in Seattle visiting with heavyweight, in the fourth of & 0 and . 21 13 friends, and will motor from there scheduled 10round bout. The title L o :?”',"",’u,q :: i.l: fo. Montang: wilte BEEHESUME ¥8s wot at stake. The champion SAMMY MANDELL JIMMY M'LARNIN Washington ... 11 20 sl ol s knocked Smith down six times in s Detroft 0 "”J‘\‘]’; s S ik N A 3 2 r. Shepard has 0 the third round. M:l\n):‘;m \fl(a):’l‘:z,r A(TL,VB".:.':‘Sa;;:;:()‘m..,” Apaliint Hith: el iwhs fic,,A]Chivuno ik R three years been connected with o T e TR andell, , clean ¢ BIt- | tonced by Judge G. J, Lomen to|mese —ri St the Federal Mining Engineer's of- old Dane_rsn?r salef}l’he Emnlre weight, lagt night successfully de- | two years at McNeil's Isl- szen,-hlp Theme fice here and it was with much fended the title .and warded off| ;g Gount one accused Marks of regret that the many friends of ANCHORAGE, ALASKA. U. 8. NON-MINERAL SURVEY No. 1857 ] Sertas No. 0v519 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 whos Washington post office address i: Colman Building, Seattle, Wash- ington, has filed its applicatior in the United States Land Officc in Anchorage, Alaska, to purchasc 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, ovne and three quarter miles southeast of Point Lucan, Latitude 58° 7’ 50" Horth, Longitude 136° 20’ 00" west, containing 14.36 acres. and more particularly described as toilows, to-wit: Commencing at Corner No. 1, gn mean high tide line on west shore of Port Althorp, Alaska, whence U. 8. L. M. No. 1657 bears south 16° 58" 24” east 16.24 chains dis- tant; thence west 20.30 chains to Corner No. 32; thence North 11.18 chains to Corner No. 3; thence East 6.85 chains to Corner No. 4; thence, meandering the mea: high tide line on west shore of Port Althorp, Alaska, south 26° 659’ Ea: 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 8.18 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. Peclinatfon 31° 30’ East. Any and all persons claiming any por of the above described tract f¢" required to file in' the Unitgs States Land Office, at A chordge, Alaska, their verse claim or claims during the period (30) days thereafter. DATED at Anchorage. Alaska. this 7th day of April, 1938 _ J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register, U. 8. Land Office. UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE First publicatton, April 12, 1928, Last publication, June 14, 1928.. the challenger, Jimmy McLarnin, from the Pacific” coast, game lit- tle Irishman, in a 15-round bout. For the entire route, the cham- pion slashed and tore at the lit- ile challenger but could not put assault with intent to commit pe. Three other counts against him, in the same indictment, were dismissed on motion of the dis- trict attorney —————— him to the floor. Throughout| convention of the Natic Bduca the latter half of the fight, M('»;Squatters Keep Homes tion ‘association here July, 1 to 6 Larnin's left eye was closed, his . arrangements for which have nose bleeding, and other eye hnll" Neal’ Old Pans w&u bean announced by Cornelia S shut, but he carried the fight to i Addir, president. | the champion every inch of the PARIS, May -Several thous- The association’s executive way and drew plaudits from more|and “squatters” on thé belt of committee, board of trustees and than 23,000 fans for his bulldog courage and fight heart, SRS 6 R 5 RN Boys Ask Thrashing So Teacher Complies territory just outside the site of the old city wall are clinging to|29. their modest homes after nearly «| ten years of resistance to the au thorities, The zone was a belt of land about two hundred yards wide or Eng., May 22— /which it was forbidden to build asked ~to " ba|before the because of the by Miss Mary |need for a clear firing ramnge if Suffolk | the city were attacked. Rag pickers, dog clippers, and When she first went to the|other folk of modest occupation: school she said she had much moved onto the zone and buil ‘rouble from some of the bigger small shacks around which they boys, who overturned ‘desks, tled |planted little gardens. They werc up the schoolroom doors and|not disturbed because their pres broke windows. ence was not objectionable. The boys told her they wanted| When the time came to improve 1 man teacher, someone who|the section, to build moderate sould thrash them. They wer(e;nrlced apartments and to lay out taunted, they said, by boys from play gardens on it, after the wall other schools because their teach-| disappeared, the “squatters” re er did not Inflict this form of|fused to leave without indemnity punishment. They are stifl there and the gov- Obtaining a stout\ strap, Miss|ernment has appointed a com Thompson was able to nullify the | mittee to consult city authorities cause for complaint and - all| as to how they can be ousted trouble at her school ceased forth-|Lawyers say they have vested with., rights and must be paid. CAMBRIDGE, How schoolboys thrashed is told Thompson, teacher in a village school. —eeo—— e, GEORGE MARKS SENTENCED JOE HILL HERE George Marks, of Yakutat, Joe Hill, pioneer fox rancher pleaded guilty at 1:15 o'clock this afternoon in the U. S. District coftt to count one in the indict- of Southeastern Alaska, is in town today and is a guest at the Zynda Hotel. - Souih i i S s G S LA YOU’LL HAVE TO ADMIT THAT THIRTY- TWO YEARS IS A LONG TIME Yet thirty-two years ago—away back in 1896, a year before the Klondike rush and two years before the Spanish-American War, this agency wrote its first policy. It has had an unbroken record of fair deai- ing down to date and is today the strongest agency in Abflkd. We want you to make use of our service whether you are a customer or not. | I ALLEN SHATTUCK, Inc. INSURANCE—REAL ESTATE Dr, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MAY 22, GAMES MONDAY Pacific Coast League m Los Angeles 0. MAGGIE- SAVE A FEW DISHES FOR \?RE AK FAST T © 1928, by Intl Feature Gre, Of N. E. A. Meeting MINNBAPOLIS, Minn., —Education for be the general theme of the pro- gram before the sixty-sixth annua! citizenship —_————— and Barton is the tri the making return on May 22 will board of directors will meet June DR. BARTON TAKES TRIP George L. ing on the Admiral Rogers this afternoon, Sitka steamer. leav- p to same 1928. By CEORGE MeMAD at Britain oyl US (R H 5% {“Landing of Bremen” Gets German Dimes| and Buicks on the Streets of Juneau Ask the owners of those beautiful cars how they perform before you decide on what car to buy. Connors Motor Company Service Rendered by Experts FRESH DOLLY VARDEN TROUT While They Last FRYE-BRUHN COMPANY QUALITY MEATS FHONE 38 TESY You can see quite a number of the new Chevrolets, Pontiacs the couple heard that due :n lack of fands in the department, the position has been discontinu~l and Mr. Shepard had accepted a position elsewhere, b gt G s ICII!!AR ED WITH ASSAULT 3i Brady and Phillip Joseph igned in the U. S. Com- s Court this morning on of & FOR QUICK SERVICE CALL 137 HENRY C. GORHAM Contractor or by the hour. Such as carpenter, masonry, shinglin plumbing, kalsomin- ing or painti in fact anything in new or repair work. ]ndv. PHONE 137 Every Month in the Year! 1928 SALES DATES May 23 September 19 Tune 27 October 24 e Tuly 25 November 21 A t 22 December 12 Spectal Sales He! Advance Made on Shipments When on Requ Dodge Brothers VICTORY SIX IS HERE Now on display at McCaul Motor Company PLUMBING Phone 589 LOOKIE Lawn G Feed-——B ket——fresh Shingles t C prices on fo serve you. Seed-—All kinds of 1l on the dre and our Service can’t be beat. the buying eleswhere. We are here D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 LOOKIE mar= ed Poultry— Transfer Get our above before MAKE NO MISTAKE We Save You 10% to 25% “We tell 'you what your job will cost” REPAIRING STEVE STANWORTH CO., Archway Shop Open Evenings HEATING “EVERYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY"” Photostat and Blue Print Service MASTER PHOTO FINISHERS WINTER & POND CO. Request of Shippers ' SEATTLEFUREXCHANGE 65 MARION STREET VIADUCT SEATTLE,US A W. P. JOHNSON Frigidaire and Delco Light SALES AND SERVICE PHONE 1 . ANEW WORLD RECORD STUDEBAKER DICTATOR GOES 5000 MILES IN LESS THAN 5000 MINUTES NO CAR IN THIS PRICE CLASS EVER REACHED THIS RECORD NORTHERN HOTEL , ROOMS—50 cents per night and up; $3.00 per week and up. Public shower and tub baths 50 cents. operation—Hot water day and might. Rooms $12.00 per month and up—steam heated Ray 0il Burner in We can tell you more about Studebaker Dictator The World’s Champion Car. On Display at JUNEAU MOTORS, Ine¢. Service Lucas