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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUESDAY JUNE 12 1928. ry (,u ® U (AST, U L CaAT FANE THAT TeRe <doat BELIEVE ME, SKOODKULM CHUCK THE GUY THAT GAVE YU T& ME WAS NO SAR = HE MADE ME'A PRESENT AND GUT YOu UFF WIS AFTER HOOFING T SEVEN MILES To~ LOSE AT GOAT, Tis RIDE FEELS Sweu- OKMNX wE RE R0.000.c00 T HUGHES RUSH GGl D £ M wHASON OKMN K, HANDS AS Can ’ EsTER AJER Blaxs C Bri vEALSICH FoRMAaN JOuN LORMS 1 CBREN JoHw P EuiLivea JEN MALEY W.C foRERTTON Jack R BURKE GORILIP MAGGIGN €0.3 MURPHY JOMN TENER JOE FANNING FRED HARPER W BRUCE CAMPOELL WILLIAM M ageery MARTN CONNINGHAM Joun Cote WARRY Joe J 6 BlaCk S Haw TAYIOR <\ R0 DOC AINSWORTH SOL LESSER M Gony TR A S RiGur Now! AAkeN SAPIRD YOU'RE A PEST WITH YOQUR ENDLESS BA-A NG AND AT The SAE Time. - N The CAR NA PuY Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneau and vie'nity, beginnirng 4 n. m. today: Cloudy tonight and Wednesday; gentle westerly winds. LOCAL DATA Barom, Temp. Humidity Wind Veloclty Weather 35 NW 13 75 Clear 82 NW 5 51 Cldy 58 58 NW .4 cldy fime— 4 p. m. yest'y 29.73 4 a. m, todav. 29.85 Ncon ‘teday . 29.92 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY TODAY Highest 8 p.m, 8 a.m. Praclp. temp, V. tlu(lly 24 hrs. 66 0 58 .10 0 0 .08 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 a.m. Weather Clear Rain Clear Pt. Cldy Clay Foggy Pt Cldy Clear Cldy Cldy Clay Prt. Cldy Stations— Nome Bethel Fort Yukon Tanana Eagle St. Paul S Dutch Harbor. Kodiak Cerdova Juneaun Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco 12 Trace Rain 0 Cldy [ Cldy *—-Less than 10 miles. NOTE.—Observations at- St. Pa Juneau, Prince Rupert, Edmontoa, Francisco are made at 4 m. and The pressure is moderately low throughout. Alaska but ris- ing in the Eastern porticn. It is moderately high in the North Pacific Ocean. Showers have fallen in the Kuskokwim E and the upper Yukon Valley and there is lerable cloudiness in other portions of the Territory. Temperatures have fallen in all parts of the Territory except the extreme southwest where | they have risen slightly. DOUGLAS | | “NEWS : DANCE EVENT PLANNED BY EAGLES LODGE aul, Dutch Harbor, Kodiak, Seattle Portland and San 4 p. m. Juneau time. ' against “Colleen” after a quarrel | between the two families. There is action, humor, a very i sweet and unusual love story and a plot that is novel nnd em.eflllnl o SRS R — - FAIRBANKS GIRL WEDS RECENTLY IN KANSAS Miss Margaret Collins, ’tm of Mr. and Mrs. A Scandinavian-American dance of Fairbanks, was to be given Wadnesday, June 20,.15 Robert Cooper at Eldorado, Is _being planned by Douglasigansas, They will make their Aerie 117, F, 0. E., as their first| pome in Kansas City where Mr.| social event in over three months. Cooper is connected with the Bm- Juneau’s mnew musical organiza pire Gas & Fuel Company. ’ ticn, the Lindseth Orchestra, The bride was educated in Fair- been cngaged to for anks and at Washington State dance which assures sood time.| | College, meeting Mr. Coope: The Eagles hall is again in fine| hy latter sehool P shape since the new foundation| e ! wag placed under the building and MORE KING SALMON it will stand the strain of the liveliest kind of a dance. - daugh- E. B. Collins | wed recently | Twelve thousand, two hlmtll‘(‘dl {umuml:{ of king salmon were {brought in yesterday for Wallis| |S. George, buyer for the San| Juan Fishing and Packing Com- pany. The Hyperien, Capt. Oscar Oberg, brought 7,000 pounds from| Sitka, the Adler, Capt. Sandy Stevens, 4,000, pounds from Tee| Harbor, and the Sadie, Capt | Sandy Stevens, 1,260 pounds frem Taku. MR. OLSON LEAVING Supt. 0. E. Olson expects to, leave today on the Dorothy Alex- ander for Skagway, the first leg of the trip which he has planned | to make down the Yukon River to Fairbanks and back to the States, from the Westward, to see as mugh of Alaska as he can before| leaving here as he does not in-| tend to return, having resigned his position in the Douglas school - e ENROUTE TO SEATTLE FESRHRE S AR MAKING SITKA VOYAGE Roundtrippers from Juneau on the Queen, making the Triangle Tour, include Miss Caroline Todd, Mrs. Ludwig Nelson and Miss Winifred Carlson. ———,—— Fada Radio Sets =znd accessor- fes, Columbia Phonographs and records. Radlo Electric Co., Mar- tin Lynch. Phone 429. adv —————— TULIPS — We have just sent an order to the wholesale growers in Holland 2 for aur annual supply of tulips, role, that of a demure and lovely|hyacinths :and crocus. = Darwin Irigh lassie in “Colleen,” which|tulips are now in'bloom and we will have its first showing at the!|invite you to inspect those grow- Liberty tonight. ing at the greemheuse or see the Both in the early sequences in|cut tulips at our store. We will reland, where Miss Bellamy is{be able to furnish most varieties khawn in the quaimt costumes of of Darwin tulips next fall at 55 a ‘daughter of the Old Sod, andjcents per 12 or $4.00 per 100, 25 in the later American scenes she|at 100 rates. Some Darwins and s equally lovely and at her best{most of the early tulips. will ‘be a8 An actress. 76 cents per 12 and $5.00 and Che story of “Colleen” deals{up per 100. These prices are de- h an impoverished Irish Lord, !lvered here in Juneau. The rea- his: son, played by Charles Mor-|{son we can make;these low prices om, and their wealthy neighbors,!is that the bulbs come to Mon- the: O'Flynns, the father played)treal by steamer, then across the by J. Farrell Macdonald and the continent in carload lot, thence gughter by Miss Bellamy. Thers by steamer to Juneau so that it is & great deal of humor in thisfcests us -less to get sthem from ure in the scenes between tne.l-[olland than the express or post-| 0 irrascible fathers of the young:age from the East would be. Our and Miss Bellamy's and,bulbs have heen producing near- lorwn- love making under,ly 100% -of fine bloom. Any- les. lm wanting a.large quantity or leen” is the mame of the j¢ottage. or ‘breeder tulips-'please horse with which the xam let us know before July 1. T to recoup their fortunes|firm we have ln‘n.gnllng with where they come, fol-|oflers more than' varieties. of ed by the O'Flynns who follow | tullps. )_to enter their own hma,—l‘v. JUNEAU FLORISTS. J. H. Michelson left on the Ala- meda yesterday for a short round trip to Seattle. He expects to re- urn in about two weeks. - e — “COLLEEN” IS AT THE : LIBERTY TONIGHT Again Madge Bellamy, the flap- per star of ‘“Sandy,” and “Sum- ner Bachelors,” scores a triumph. s time in an entirely different | '| ogists believed they had SALY CREEK OIL FIELD IN WYOMING RETURNS $45,000.000 TO. U. S CASPER, Wyo., June 12—Dis-|could never hope to gain that dis tinction unusual in the petroleum | tinction, and thus it is that it has world is held by the Salt Creek|become the little brother of the oil field, subject of inves‘igation|larger field. ordered by the United State: sen-| Discovery 'of the Salt ate. !field is credited by Cy ba, Its record as a revenue produc- drove his first location stake in er in public land ledgers includes |18 Production began on a earnings of approximately § mall scale in 1880, when crude 000,000 in royalties to the govern-|oil was hauled in wagons to Cas- ment, in addition to willions!per for refining. Since then the which the state of Wyoming hags'field has produced in excess of received from a mile-square school :u‘a,nou,u_un barrels of crude, has lease. supplied” big plants of the Mid- Proximity to Teapot Dome,|West Refining Company and the which joins it on the south, II.H‘\lumlaxnl 0il Company of Indiana brought Salt Creek into the spot- |at Casper, and more than 2,150 light of senatorial inquiry. Drain-jwells have been completed. The | age from the Teapot area into|peak of production was reached Salt Creek through econtiguous in 1923 when the aggregate sands has been claimed and re-| put was 00,060 barrels. futed by geologists of couflicting | year 14,352,000 barrels were opinion. duced. The latest official statement on | the subject came from the naval| petroleum reserves inspector. lln‘ says the southern end of Sult| Creek Last pro- are in- field, which is 45 north of Casper. Original placed the possible covery of oil from the field a‘ 1 600,000,000 barrels, but that has been revised downward from yes ag|to vear, bolstered at times new discoveries. The structure may contain seven fields that num Iher of oil-bearing ands have heen discovered underlying each other and ranging from 600 to 3, 1000 feet in depth. ——e——— HAS RHEUMATISM than 1,600 a More le in the I cluded miles cstimates re- Creek actually extends into the reserve, although the two are sa2p- arated by a structural “saddle.” He denies analine dye tests had proved the drainage theory, others had reported When Teapot lands were with-| drawn from entry and t*‘%ldhlnhy ed as a reserve, government geol-; preserv-| ed the cream of production in the Salt Creek district for future na- val purposes, . That supposition | generally was accepted by reason of perfect structural indications until Teapot was leased to the Sinclair interests and drilling was|at the Mendenhall started. tis in St. Ann’s hospital Salt Creck by that time hfld',n,,lum AN PR been established as one of the, BRSSO world's greatest light oil fields Amenmns aiwars pays. Development revealed that Tedapol the coluymns of The Empire he said to is employed power house, Ben Phillips, who — TONIGHT—7:30 MADGE BELLAMY “COLLEEN” SPECIAL ATTRACTION THURSDAY TOM PARKER AND HIS MERRY MAKERS IN 45 MINUTES OF FUN The Reliable News Stand 219 Front St. Next to Reliable Transfer We handle all Alaskan publications including Ketchikan Chronicle—Cordova Times— Anchorage Times — Fairbanks News-Miner—Dawson News We are agents for the Kris Kross Razor and Supplies—Stationery and Mmers Supplies If we haven't what you want, we'll get it for you. REMEMBER——We deliver' your papers and maga- zines after'every boat. Don’t forget to order your ICE CREAM, CANDIES and CIGARS BERRY'S TAXI STAND OpmlromGu.m.toln.m. A. B. CHAWIN Prop Phone 221 AR who | out- t t t e churches support of the powers in the pres- ent and against State night anniversary Manhattan. steps taken toward outlawing war since the idea was first originated ymore than a year ago. LUTHERAN SUNDAY SCHOOL its Salmon and fzom the picnie grounds will meot at’ the Lutheran church not rain the picnic All | Sunday 1 St. (fering with rheumatism. ceiving BROTHER ~1Mm GWNING That GOAT Te AR = OH WELL \\Y WAS mer/ R JUNEAU BILLIARDS RE-OI{EN§ TONIGHT of the Juneau Billiard Parlors announced they will re-open for business at o'clock this evening, having com- pleted repairs sustained by a re- cent fire. Everything has been put in pre-fire order by workmen who have been on the job since the blaze. In appreciaticn of the fine werk of the firemen and of thos +1Who helped save their property, *lthe owners of the Parlors ex- (holpressed their thanks to those par- ties OUTLAWINGWAR . YORK, June of Ameriea are NEW 12—The urging effort to achiove a straightforward” dec war, said Secreta Kellogz in an addr commemorating the of the founding Reformed Church He summarized “simple he Dutch e WILL BE HERE TONIGHT ON DOROTHY ALEXANDER e those who will be in this evening while the Alexander is in port are, ell Taylor and Miss M. Bugge, Kelchikan teachers, and Miss Vera Stewart, who is em- ployed in a Ketchikan bank, who are making the round trip from Ketehikan on the steamer. They will visit with Mr. and Mrs, Fred Henning and Norman '‘Cook while are in town. Among Juncau Dorothy Miss TO HOLD PICNIC TOMORROW Tha Sunday school of the Resur rection Lutheran church will hold annual picnic tomorrow Creck. Hveryome is ask-| d to take a basket lunch, a cup spoon. Those who have no of tramsportation to orv ans later han 10 o'clock and transporta ion will bs provided. In case of will be postponed of the Luthoran their familics and attaad. A New Shipment of TEST MODEL | TAN KODAKS Just Arrived CLEAN UP _PAINT UP Then take n Kodnk picture | AL AQKA S(‘ENI(‘ VIEWS Photie '35 menhers school, riends are invited to R MARINE CASE, HOSPITAL 8" 3" BroWn, member of the srew of the Queen, was (aken to Ann’s hospital yesterday suf- MRS G. B. PRESTON | TEACHER OF VIOLIN Phene 3352 HORMEL’S SCHOOL OF PIANO " PLAYING ALL GRADES ACCEPTED Mrs. Ruth Messerschmidt * Phore 4501 flavor sealed HAMS i :lz Fresh Vegetables cvery FORGET-ME-NOT TEA ROOMS Special * attention given to luacheons, dinners and ban- quets, Chicken dinner every Thursday night. Mrs. Kath- Wednesday 6| erine Hooker, Phone 157. Swanson Bros. LOWER FRONT ST, JAPANESE TOY 'SHOP H. B. MAEING “Front Street P. 0. Box 218 for Mall Orders Strict Attention Given Out-of-Town Orders GEO. ANDERSON Piane Tuner Phonograph Repairing ‘We call and- deliver - PHONE 143 Anderson Music Shoppe Standard Transfer Walter Bindseil, Prop. Stand Juneau dmcery Phone 419 Residence Phone 2203 A POINTER If you are not completely satisfied with the fuel you . are burning in your fur- nace, range, heater or fire- place grate TRY - DIAMOND BRIQUETS “THE ALL-PURPOSE FUEL” YOUR DEALER SELLS THEM OR PHONE Pacific Coast Coal Co. PHONE 412 C. D. FERGUSON, Agent < ki e Eyen the beaten path has holes that men fall into “I'LL GIVE YOU A CHECK!” There is a sense of personal and permanent estab- lishment, plus plenty of pride, in the voice of the person who coolly reaches for a pen, produces a check-pad—and begins to scribble. | | A pcrsonal checking account is a justifiable head- sweller. Get one yourself, | | @ First National Bunk “There is mo Substitute for Safety” /g WHEN YOU BUY CEMENT IT PAYS TO BUY SUPERIOR PORTLAND CEMENT $5.00 PER BARREL RED CEDAR SHINGLES 6 to 2s—$4.75 per M. 5 to 2s clear—$5.00 per M. Get ouy quantity prices on lumbeér Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. —Lumber For Every Purpose— The Summer Season Demands —tempting, appetitizing foods. Whether you are preparing a simple or an elaborate menu you can rest assured that it will more than please the most diseriminating taste if you buy our HIGH GRADE GRO- CERIES. Our customers receive: Variety, Low }'ilx_'iyce, Service and above all else, QUAL- CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 “Best in Everything” The Workingmen’s Tailor . Shop is now open and ready for business under the management of Sam Shabaldak, expert tailor. Our shop is open for your inspeetion. SUITS MADE TO ORDER Alternations—Expert Cleaning and Pressing Our prices are reasonable Located on Front Street at entrance to Pacific Steamship Dock