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GOOD AFTERNOON MR GOOGLE Tt THE CaNDDAT I MADE A DATE For You OVER FOR A L\TTLE TONIGHT = NMOURE GoInG To TAKE AN (MPORTANT PART (4 TEE (NTTIATION - WEVE 'GOT A CANDIDATE COMING (N FROM ST PALL AND WE'RE GONNA MAKE HIM RIDE THE GoaT FROM ST PAUL. AND I CAME ADNICE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1928 By BILLE DE BECK RAMSEY = B BaLTivoRe 19 ANGORA (0 CLAYTEN EDDIE JACKSON FRANKIE MORRIS SiaME DURANTE. ToAY Liman EDDIE Ghav ARRY SMiTH €0 KIRKELY JIMME C'eREN ToMGOT T CHAS JOMNTON JACK CONNOR Gus Gode \WALTER OWEEFR. VAL EVERS TACK WIHITE. Tota T4y CEG CHILES bAL Weap B.QuMMING. Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneau and vic'nity, beginning 4 p. m. today: ! Fair tonight westerly winds. and Friday, warmer Friday; moderate north- Th farm City tract LOCAL DATA Barom. Temp. Humidity Wind Veloeity Weather 29.89 3 44 NWwW 12 Clear 29.93 50 84 E 2 Clear 29.95 64 56 NW 14 Clear CABLE AND RADIO REPURTS | wast YESTERDAY | RO Highest 8 pm. | Low 8a m. 8am. Precip. 8am. temp, temp. temp. temp. ._Weather 54 50 14 48 Clay | 50 18 Clear | 68 54 Clear 50 54 Pt. Cldy | 72 50 Clear | 14 38 16 42 18 14 fime— 4'p. m. yest'y 4 a. m. today Noon today 2 v | youn or o cactu toxi It w less A &tnumu— Riome Jethel s Fort Yukon Tanana . Eagle $t. Paul ; Mutch Harbor Kodiak Cordcva Juneau Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Pertland San Francisco | | | 08 Trac .10 0 Y |1and, Rain | ClAY | fine Clear |in a Clear | ofor Rain f gyt Clear | qypp Cldy | othe Cldy | Cldy | *—-Less than 10 miles. | cator L.-(z r San |°f : " | expe Harbor, Kodiak, Portland and NOTE. tions at St. Paul, Dutch Juneau, Prince Rupert, Edmonton, Seattle Francisco are made at 4 a. m. and 4 p. m. Juneau time. The center of low pressure has moved southward Harbor where the baromete 1g this morning was 29.22 in- | ches. The pressure is above normal at Cordova and high to the |5t ¢ g A A e e b 8 o Cordova west- | 4M0 ard and in the lower Tenana Valley. Fair weather has Byt dinued in other portions of the Territor Temperature e fallen decidedly in the upper Yukon Valley with little ¢ 2 S ange ‘l ?A!wwherc. « &4 : L1 1 and sister of Axtell, are now l\'{ x i DO[]GLAS ’:in:: in Bremerton, according i the latter. | ferm to Dutch | s¢ and Mrs. Marie McLean, mothe; hapy overs L0 runn [ week DAVIN BUILDING P NEWE - [E S e e MINERS AND CITY TEAM TO PLAY BALL ON FOURTh! The equiiy i the Tom {building on lower Front That there will be plenty doing was s6ld at public anction yester | s on July Fourth this year was in- day for $5,000 to Guy Wing, mem dicated at the meeting of the ber of the Juneau police 1 Sports Committee which was held| Heirs of Mr. Davin e 10-| prosi last evening to decide on the dif-|cated by J. H. Hart, local attor-| ferent events, iney, after much effort on his par A ball game, ajways the big; Davin was born in Birkenhead,| yyra] event of the celshration, will be| England, in 1967, according to alyang. the main attraction and one that|letter received by Mr. Hart re- syste should be worth staying home for cently from Thompson and Righy,|ways even if there was nothing else.solicitors of Birkenhead. Davin's|pyilt Hwo teams, a miners’ team s age at the time of his death was!ipa city team are lned up for thelonly 61. casion and an exciting game, for| e left home while a boy, and hich they are practicing hard,{had not communicated h his! promised. A prize of $75 nas|relatives to the time of his death. leen hung up for this event. use he had not learned to Then there will the usual{write until long after he left his ose races, only this year they home. He lived here for man- ill be bigger and better than|years and worked his way into er. The fire department with|the taxi business here and later s new and improved equipment,|took over the Front Street prop- prepared to furnish some res | erty now owned by Wing, citement for which $50.00 prize| He is survived by a oney is offered. Coyle, three brothers, And there will ! Patrick, 48, and Daniel, alore, races for two nie ther events in — h!I\;:‘)lu“;‘mnnum-vmr»nu have yet Cm FIRE GIRI"S ol TO BE SPONSOR BY NEW COMMI en made by the committees on e patriotic exercises and dance jut it is understood arrange- ents are in progress such that the results will be most satistac-{ With ils object to sponsor the tory. Camp Fire Girlse of Juneau, the Juneau Business and Professional Women's Club has announced the appointment of a Camp Fire Ways and Means Committee. The first meeting of this group was held yesterday, with repre- sentatives from the Mooseheart Legion, KEastern Star, Episcopal Guild, Juneau Woman’s Club, Re- bekah Lodge and the Methodist Church, while representatives are! to be appointed from the Luther-| an, Presbyterian and Catholic Churches and the American Le- gion. The object of tlis committee Martin Olson is here at thelis (o place the girls’ organization me of his brother, August Olfon a firm basis, such as the Boy m, having arrived enroute to|Scouts now have. Mrs, H. L. enakee Springs where he in [Redlingshafer, who has been act- tends to vacation for a time. Af- ing as guardian, has announced T more than ten years’ residence|per resignation, but will have such ‘a pretty section of thelcparge of the girls until a suc- uniry as Mount Vernon, ‘Martin., cessor is appointed. fho was a popular Douglasite for| 7hose at the meeting yesterday er twenty years, states that and the groups they represent are ere Is no place as fine as Alas-|ag follows: = Mrs. Harold Smith,! in the summer time. 1 Juneau Woman's Club; Mra. June T Brown, Business and Professional Axtell Returns .. Women's Club; Mrs. Don Skuli.lv N Roebekahs; ‘Mrs. Jarman, Modso.| Harry Axtell, who wore the City{peart Legion; Mrs.: Roy Ruther- e badge of Douglas for a ¢;q Fastern Star; Mrs. Well rm three years ago, was a visi-| nan' Holbrook, Episcopal Guild: In_town yesterday while the Gruber, Methodist . Ciurch. tive, on' which he is an engi- . in port om its way to be be foot races everyona. and the small sports — - 1SS SEY GOES TO N. Y.; MARRIAGE NEXT MONTH Miss Martha Sey, daughter of r. and Mrs. Charles Sey, left is morning on the Aleutian en. ute to New York City where e is to be married July 9. She ill make the trip east over the hicago, Milwaukee and St. Paull ilroad. ————— LD TIMER HERE FOR SHORT VISIT ‘Callc; to F armrzéigain MEXICO The previously stern fed alfalfa The d ili]ns C | One e al over Mexico. | foremost {is at this job sever formal dress, depending upon | engagement ithe nationa [ tull d Officialy re given to establishing ating object When Presid CITY, June 30 tractors on a ney Ends 21 to the wi | , but few que convic alles' ¢ s hearing his m of hi g n the sin- in where 3 or had ever been cpera land, now gi 1 g orchards, da been e, either producing 1ly the maguc B i te o, 18 from which pulgue, an in- |, B G Rt of ting native drink, ; s AB ke o He thought th land 3~ for anything else. man with a square js face and a firm eye fighter, but withal ht some of pumped water cn it, pl and fruit tre cattl ther farm ns rliest recol- ther. teli| iding into | ran - the from their| s abandoned | still in his the family gat it tof 1, befcre he became a school-teacher, a hlmi-l follower of Madero,) Sonora, a member Obregon’s Cabinet, himse!f lectior how Apa It w man, a Governor of President i n Preside ipult atop a hill| overlooking M v, where resort ore Cor- SUpy d to be the| xican President. ! ts g1 1 are of gilt and narble, put there by Maximilian. | luxuriously furnished. Down the hill there is a| formerly the |'v.\1~; ajor domo of the| and his family dair tr ¢ there hed been pulque becatie profit-p on or no s imitated iry les. 1 al idealist nil y strate exicc. After to be president of the things he is t is that as a result netration 30 tractor ing in a little section where | were known before. Upon | [ Tive all scale it is what he wants | g at n Plutarco wise he 1s edu- farm ¢lope of and reform resident . 80C fa dairy er y to live iiready in built a where he will after he leaves office. His| named Santa Barbara, Ambassador Morrow went | He has house | Mexico City, ( t farm and tractor are hi jto an end wa | cuba { to relurn | trade | | ‘.llnv au en the r the ham and eggs breakfast S01with the President ‘that hegan ! % Uodndyineir friendship, is 500 or 600 | In his flelds |, 00 4hout 18 miles, from the himselt. Hely i s When he is a former President| Of Pro-1,,4 a tull-time dairy farmer Cal- | tepetl the..mountain expects to motor out every | RO !'"’“ ' Mexican rning and work on the f:\l'm{ are erimgon in the dawn. py | | joys. He when at is never as daylight il ing his tractor ly ad'thé SHOW cfdk all hours ~of hard a the farm he b |See End of Plan To Cut Sugar Crop| to ine and motors to| ace to put in a| other job of x,uzn;‘J (Conlinumn 11 ! Take One.) | y at his dent. | his foremost efforts| The first prote against cur-| rricul [l:nlmum to be entered was from schools and rural credit| the Cienfuegos Chamber of Com-| s, developing the educational | merce. It was declared that the n 1 ving high-| Tarafa plan would be “pernicious | and projects | to th> economic situation o! Cuba, . Improved conditions for|and in no way contribute to the| masses sums up his domin-| betterment of the market. This| in office, Opinion' protest was defeated because lim-| | e e ik FEVRLILY | | | OFF TO KANS- This picture shows Alaska’s delegates to the Republican National Convention, and others, as they were leaving Seattle aboard the Nerth Coast Limited train of the Northern Pacific Railway. This train also carried all the Washington and Oregon delegates. Reading from left to right are: Judge James Wickersham, Juneau; Will A, Steel, Juneau; Charles Allen, Seattle, and Dr, W. H. Chase, Cordova. { - e |‘7 | itation of the erop then coming “fait accompi” and | the government did not w appear weak before foreie 8 producing associations with whom olonel Tarafa haa been denjing. | | The ge al attitude among su-| | rocane growers and grinders that if Cuba had continued with- out curtaflment production many other sugar producinz countries Given Tomorrow By Local Chamber Tomorrow will be Alaska | Juneau day with the Chamber o Commerce which holds its ly mnoon luncheon weet- in the banquet room of the Elks building. P. R. Brad- ley, Consulting Engineer, L, H. Met r, General Sumerin- tendent, and the heads of the everal departments are in- vited as guests of the Ch | ber. SCASON| | Other guests tomorrow wm: include Charles D. Garfield; | Manager of the Alaska De-. | partment of the Seattle Cham- ber of Commerce. and C. R. | A]\'D WIIEI Settlemier, pioneer mining | S and newspaper man of Yukon | i L'| Territory, A special musical program h been arranged | for the meéting. would have been forced ‘o cut Gown their own production ‘o ne betlerment of tha island industry.| Semiofficial reports sa will make redoubled the ‘United Stat which four ye amounted to 3,800,000 nually and which last dropped to 3,000,000 tons — e, — WHO'S WHO tons Wolt chant, p. 5 way tian C. M. Lane, representative of | the Ingersoll-Rand Compan southbound ¢ from ard on the Charles ) Schillings Simon, Anchor mer- d through Juneau on to Seattle on the Aleu-| | sengers on the steamer Aleutian, Mrs rizl Santos, whose hus- band is proprietor of a re urant n Seward, is on the Aleutian on her way to Seattle. iiepiinser, of Anchorage, through Juneau' on the Seattle on the Aleutian. Georga D. Bishop, veterinatian, 1eft here Yukon for the westwar, took passage for Seward. After visiting here with bis par- ents for several days, Stanley Sup-| Jargensen left on the Yukon for was al Latouche. steamer| Donald McDonald, student of |the Alaska College, who has been who reprecents| visiting here with James Connors, the DuPont Powder company, re-|left for his home in Fairbanks, turned from a trip to the West-| He is ‘on the Yukon bound for ward "6n the Aleutian this morn-| Valdez and will go to the -Intarior g over the Richardson Highway. r. and Mrs. Fred P. Bemis, of L. M. Carrigan, traveling man, Fairbanks, are Seattle bound pas-|left for Seward on the Yukon. el T ] s a passen Sew- man for ed in Aleutian from the rd | W. Jones, r, returned tc a trip to Cordeva, tian. w. ed e merchandise | ment Juneau from | the on the Aleu- on He K. Sheldon, , representa- tive of the Pacific Marine ply company of Seattle, Juneanw arrival on the Aleutian. . H. Abbott, DISHAW & PETERSON _PHONE 218 SPECIAL SALE ON OIL CLOTH at PAINT STORE ALASKA MEAT CO. Wholesale and Retail Butchers PHONE 30 ' SEWARD STREET JUNEAU - A POINTER If you are not completely satisfied with the fuel you are burning in your fur- nace, range, heater or fire- govern. | place grate TRY DIAMOND BRIQUETS “THE ALL-PURPOSE FUEL” YOUR DEALER SELLS THEM OR PHONE .. Pacific Coast Codl Co. _PHONE 412 C. D. FERGUSON, Agent T’u’re l'.)' now a tax on ever ythin‘( but ener 8y Since our beginning we have built upon cur integgity and usefulness to our customers. Thus we have built an asset. We wish to call your attention to this asset. You may collect on it. Our banking service merits inquiry by you. Others have benefited by it. First National Bunk “There is mo Substitute for Safety” DANCE A. B. HALL, | SCIENTISTS SAY THAT ' Pure Ice Cream WILL DO YOU GOOD. |, You can get 100 per cent pure Ice Creantat the JUNEAU BILLIARDS | Phone 94 CARLSON'S TAXI . i T FURNITURE Tables-ChairsnDavénpc;iié : Day Beds-Matiresses Springs SATURDAY NIGHT THE Thomas Hardware Co 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—$56.00 per M. Get ous quantity prices on lumber Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. —Lumber For Every Purpose— Mr. and. Mrs. Coal Consumer: Admiralty Island Furnace Coal should not be confused with Screening; it contains much coarse coal walnut size and smaller, in fact many of the coal users find it ideal for their cook stoves and heaters. Try a few sacks next time you are order- ing coal. - We know you will like-it and- call for it often. And the price too keeps the coal bill down. g Order from your own coal dealer or * transfer man. | The Admiralty Island Coal Company Temporary office with' H. R. and Son 115 Seward Street w«w "y U Old Papers for‘s_a‘;aL_Eiilpjie, O