The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 1, 1929, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY JAN 51929, Weather Condxhom Ax Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau [ Forecast for Junean and vicinity, beginnmg 4 v. m. today: | Fair tonight and probably Wednegday; LOCAL DATA fime— Barom. Temp. nmmaity Wizd Velocity Weathe: 4 p. m. yest'y...30.08 %4 48 SE 12 Cldy \4 a. m. today...29.78 30 36 E 20 Clear n today ....29.80 28 59 SE 10 Cldy CABLE Al AND RALIO KEPORTS TS ITEHRDAY “TODAY Highest 8 pm. | Low 8a.m. 8am. Precip. S8dm temp. temp. ' | temp. temp. Velocity 94 hra Weather -4 -12 20 -2 Bethel $i-n. 23 12 Fort Yukon ... -8 -8 I . =4 -6 . =46 —46 . 32 32 38 34 . 36 34 34 24 % WINTER SPO& easterly winds. Time Is Here! A New Year Comes By William Frederick Bigelow SRR gives the sport more fun than the of winter? hockey — w loving per: NEW YEAR is in the harbor, bringing the desires of merry gam our hearts. It comes laden with every good thing we have wished for—peace and prosperity, good-will and hap- Ppiness, labor and the desire to labor. Our share of all these things is in the hold; we have only to claim it. And pay the du Because the year—this year or any other—is not a bringer of free gifts, of largesse unsought. There is toil. There is striving, There is being unafra ITHOUT these we for we shall only co: one with a fuller beart will illing to pay— ¥ we shun deceit, If we abhor trickiness, If we keep our own hands clean, If we hold fast to that which is good, we shall watch the year depart, knowing it carries with it nothing of ours—nothing that we have missed. Instead we shall have laid vp riches—against an uncertain future. aNOBRTAIN unless we are very careful now. Two Get equipped here. We have in town for sport. | the best equipment | Btations— all cold-weather |Barrow Nome Clear Snow Clay Cldy Clear Rain Rain Clear Clear Clear Rain J uneau Young Hardware Co. | St. Paul |Dutch Harbor. | Kodiak | Cordova | Juneau 0 | Ketchikan 1.01 | *—Less than 10 miles, | NO'T'E:~—Obsgervations at 8t. Paul, Dutch Harbor, Kodlak, Ju« |neau, Prince:Rupert; Edmontof, Satilej Portland and S-n Fian cisco are made at 4 a.m., Juneau til ot gd down to the harbor, 1y with empty hands. Some ¢ our share. But if we are Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. Lumber For Every Purpose i The bavometric. pressure -was .oderately high ths {ing over the Upper Yukon: Valley,<#nd low along the cos.t AlS tricts from Dutch ~Harbor - soUtiiwded, ‘with 'the olwest reported | presstire being 29.58 iuches at Du &rbor Precipitation oc- |curred over the’ lower Kuskokwim -Valley, at St. Paul Island; the Aleutian Islands, ‘and 'at’' Ketehikadi) Colder weather was re- WISHES YOoUu NEW YEAR New hold days of Health, Hap- Year ess and Prosperity for .-"f rvmé’ s Co., Inc. 1g Department .S\mc e own: immediately after g ‘with Senator Hiram D. Johnson (rig! t)\of Representative Philip D. Swing of lhc sime i#fllfln of the measure. The President gave one of tm fi signed to Senator Johnson. A : ME EXPRESS APPRECIATION subscription to Saturday F}qenlng Post and Literary Digest from Mr. and Mrs. Blackmar, Ketchikan; s of Oldtlmers Tend-! to Those Remem- g Them at Xmas ignin| box af apples and another of cigars from Senator Forest J. Hunt, Ket. chikan; boxes cf apples and pears and a crate of pears from Camp- befl & O'Neill, Anchorage; box of cflgnrs from E. Barron, Sitka; two boxes- of cigars from Women's Auxiliary, American Legion Post, of Sitka. The Home also receiv- es a copy of every newspaper pub. lished in the Territory and the Alaska Weekly of Seattle. and deep approciation jef The names of the residents of by the 103 residents of|the Fionsers' Ifome whose thanks Pioneers’ Home at S.ka tc8re conveyed to those remewmber- lonors to the Pioneers’ Chri=:.| & them, are: Fupd, to W. D. Gross fdts| Anderson, John A., Nome; Arent. ~and principal backer, and|son, August, Seward; Antilla, Hen- | ‘these who aided in putting|ry, Tenakee; Baker, John, Nome; ~over. ‘In a communica-|Bourne, Henry J., Nome; Bernard, & The Bmpire from Supi.jWilliam, Killisnoo; Borch, Chas. € \mm of the Houe,|H. Wrangell: Beleher, Thomas, of the oldtimers are|Ketchikan; Bankston, John, Ram. part; Brankel, Casper, Seldovia; m received $21.35 in|Boyer, Ross, Valdez; Coffey, Pat- Christmas Fund. Intric, Fairoanks; Carter, Jack, Dome m were re- Creek; Chesman, Wlflhfl. Fair- 5 {ported from the Seward |about the same as yel!er ay. ninsula, 4 where temperatures were ames, Junew Juneau; Curry, banks; Cuulifl’ Chisholm, .. W John, Wrangell; Skagway; Jantonwine, Kotchikan; Ohsigtensen, >tchikan;: Olark, J. 3, Pairbanks; libreath, van, Timothy, Ketchikan; Dimond, airbank 3. K. Nenana; | Donewy Fairbanks;-Dunlap, €. C.,| | “Freeman, | | Jordova; i Govro,. J..J; Ketclilkan; Gee, | StephenAu | | 03, Sevald, Jupeau; . Hurley,| | i Craig; Harrison, Robert, Douglas: . Harding,: Joseph, Wrah- 11; Heidorn, M; Juneau; Hil, ierman, Anchorage; Johnson, Fred Wrangell; Jacobs, Thomas, Ju- |neau; Johnson, :Jodt, T<Harbor; an, Harry, Juneau; Jenne, ‘Wi | Fairbanks; Johnson, |Berndt, | Anchorage; . Johnson, Seward; Kleve, 0lie, Tenakec; A iner, Isgac, Juneau; Keller, J: banks; Lawler, John, Ne- Loper, George, Fairbanks; Lambe John H., Jack-Wade; Limback, John W. McCarthy; Linn, Matt, Seward; Lahti, ham, Tenakee; Lord, Vigtor, Fair. banks;. Lawson, William, Dow. 1as; Mikelo, Joseph, Juneau; Morrisan, Andrew, Nome; McComb, Joseph, | Juneau; Maguire, B. J., Tenakee; | Marklin, Williaim, Fairbanks; Ma- theson, William, Fairbanks;; Moo- dy, Warren B., Fairbanks: ‘Me- Guire, Frank, Katalla; Mahon, Pat, Seward; Mclsaacs, Gus,, Al- chorage: = MeLecd, - Johm, Anchor- age; Murphy, Hugh, Hyder; ris, Martin, : Unalaska; s Moore, K. B. Moors, Sewarc) Olson, Berndt, Nome: O'Brien, J, J. Jundau; O'- Neil, Steve, Nenana; Palmer, John, Ketchikan; Peterson, Ole, Ketchi- kan; Rasmussen, John, [liamna; Rosenburg, Max, Ketchikan; Roy, Horace, Sitka; Roberts, W.. S, Rampart: Rodeger; Joseph, Fair- banks; Rebhun, Chas, McGrath; Rabidou, Bzra, Bethel; Rice, L. F., Fairbanks; Swanson, Chas. H, Ketchikan; Stym, Chris, Nome; states, Henry, Juneau; seph, Juneau; burg; Steffensen, Tom, Fairbatks; Stout, R. A. J., McGrath; 8 A. J., Fairbanks; Swigert, G| W, Nenana; Schmeaser, H. flg: ard; Shsa, Peter, Kodiak; 8im mons, Wm. S, Anchorage; ‘Shee- han, Willam, Unalaska; TWah, Joe, Juneau; Tronsen, Hans, Kef- chiken; Tibbitts, A. M. Craig:|n Twomey, Mike, Cordova; Watson, W. J., Ketchikan; Webber, Eéfiifi_l Keétchikan; Warner, Edward, Sew- art.i, and Webe, Chas., of Hope. — —eee - — BOLIVIK AND jnana; Abra-) Victor:- 'Hy, | | Mot- | ' Scott, Jo- | Smith, F., Peters: @r. Herbert Charies Clark of New'. York has been appointed di- r«pz of the Gorgas Memorial lab- oratory to be established at Panama City by act of congress tribute to,the health and sanital plishments of the late Gen. Willlam C. Gorgas. MILLION AND HALF DOLLAR FIRE N WASH. M'CLEARY, Wash., ' Jan. 1— Fira' starting under the sanding magchined late yesterday afternoon, cal $1,500,000 damage at- the McOleary- Door Factory. d made work for the fire fighters difficult and a water short. age hampgred-fighting the fire. Phe fire was brought under con- alfter three quarters of the fant had been destroyed. Phe door department, stamp and part of the cutting plant Bwept away but part of the 8] sheds, power house and vaneer plants were saved. One thousaid men were em- mm at the plant. lnry McCleary, owner, an- ced that the loss was covered @sunnc' and he would start rdnndlug immediately. —————— mmu»;mu * m‘ TINOPLE. Jan. 1L— ng&:a n “fairy- odmm!her" of .| ty of the n Horn. Misa. Caril ; gmmug‘;qd&ox ., and Toledo m decotated with' the (.\le Kingdom .ot the. ts, and mgv s, in .. |Both Nations Accept T;lfifi : of Protocol for Settle- ment of Dlspules WASHINGTON, Jan. 1—Amn. ment of Bolivia and Paraguay to the terms of the proticol for se! tlement of their dispute was & ence. Under the terms of the protocol representatives of five nations will nieet and adjust diffdrences be- iween the two South Amarican na- tions. ———— FEW SICK AT HOSPITAL Nearly all of the patients in St Ann’'s Hospital ‘were able to efi. joy the coming of the New -Year! last night. At the present time ithere are no patients 4n a serious condition and those who have been quite il} are improving. ' Only two new cases were received yesterday and these were workmen fro; A. J. Mine, with light cases fluenza. \ The presentation was. made at vtla ‘elose*of ‘an impressive cere- } il | oiton e ——— & ~onstituted an innovation in the (Petersburg Press.) mony held in the chapel of the Jugoslaylan Embassy conducted by the Jugoslavian Archbishop who in presenting the Red Cross of his' coyntry to. Miss Mills praised ‘the work she had done nounced last night at the close of | po for sufferi Se! the session of the special mmmxt-.?: T e i tee of the Pan-Americar Confer-| IM‘ nationalities who swarm in ‘the destitute of all creeds {Q wm gity. LAST OF VETS' CLUB TO GET WINE REWARD | iST. PAUL, Jan. 1.—Sealed in | an Austrian shell case is a bot- | | tle of French wine to be drunk by the Jast survivor of a club | of world war veterans. per- The tion tected l."'g by officers of | the 161t Fleld Anmen and ‘Was patterned after the civil | war club of infantrymen of Company B, First Minflesota | ent, ml\lt one of whose a aceom- | ‘Rapid | we must work out this year: Peace, with honor, abroad; honor, with peace, at now,;huecoudonn;zukwmday It's a tricky year; it's a precious year. Which, depends on us, Buzthueummedtawon'y— There is courage. There is faith, There is God. Happy New Year— home. The first is facing us (Republiahed by courtesy of Good Househasping Magazing) F‘leureue at Paul Poiret’s is a dress for a young flgure has a straight princess front and a fan-tailed long skirt in back, and is made of dark blue taffeta embroidered at imtervals with red, The fullness of the skirt is joined to the slender bodice in back by points finished with white piping. The same white borders, neck, hem and the long tles which hang yellow and blue nosegays. from the decolletage in back. It RITA. ROOSEVELY I NEWGOVERNOR OF N. Y, STATE Tal:es Oath of Office in Hlstorlc Caj llaf Hudson iver i %munumx fTom ¥ase One) by Military Pande The ceremonies of the inaugura- ftion proper began this morning with a military parade in which units of the New York National Guard and the New York Naval Militia from all parts of the state ‘participated. At noon, after all guests of hon- or had been announced by the ser- geant-at-arms of the state assem- bly, and seated on the platform with the formal permission of the Secretary of State, the Governor- eleet entered the capitol with his honorary escort. ‘This escort, some units of which wore the pic- turesque uniforms of the war of 1812, was composed of detach- ments of 12 men each of the Veteran Corps of Artillery, New York City; the Old Guard of the City of New York, with their tow-| ering black busbys, and the Troy Citizen’s corps. klin D. Roosevelt 'was in- troduced to the audience in | Ristoric proceduts, the governor- | {the past by the Secretary of State. elect having been introduced in Governor - Smith’s address was not only one of introduction, but something also *of a valedictory. It was his farewsll to the people of New York state after a quarter of a century of alniost unbroken serv- ice on Capitol Hill Then tie Govérnor-elect took tho oatli of office. As his last word diel away, a gighal was flashed from a window @ the capitol and a battery of artilléry stationed on the capitol lawh, blazed forth the governor's salute, proclaiming to the awhiting ercwds that tho Em. pire State had a new chief exccu- tive. —————————— PETERSBURG MAN DENIES - REPORT OF HIS WEDDING Like the premature report the death of Mark Twain, so the report of the marriage Erik Ness, prominent local busi- ness man who is now visiting in the States, *“greatly exagger- ated.” A report published in the Washington Posten under date of December 14, copies of which were received here ' this week, lead to the belief that Mr. Ness taken unto himself a bride and local friends cabled con- gratulations to him, The following reply um from Minneapolis where Mr. Ness is now visiting on A_‘ulm gets the rumor at rest: “You fellows are all wet and the Washington Post- agsembly chamber by the retiringfen is crazy.” .Bang! Bang! And governor, Alfred E. Smith. another Tumor bites the dust.— ing Unwritten Melodies of Spains ‘gufled down from nnlldl.n l:o S A HAPPY and PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR To the Public For the present Brunswick Machines and Records will be sold from rooms adjoining Candy Factory on Lower Seward Street. Jce Cream, 50 cents per quart. Fresh made Choco- latest in boxes or bulk at wholesale prices—cash and carry. EVERYTHING MADE FRESH DAILY — Nothing imported that can be bought in Juneau — patromzv your home town products. ELMER E. SMITH 9 a. m. to 7:30 p. m. Compos or of “Ramona” Collect | N The. chapel onfhe hill covered with dew.: be copied by many other s writers. In “Chiquita” she eau the romantic notes of the caval strumming his guit: also lhrted n new w; iqui-ta, Mabel Wayne Suggests Change in American Orchestra New York City.—Mabel Wayae, e e 2o Bowtn o stadg, at s a % NW&" ph :fn:i“lmt'h‘: un- written Spanis| ic, in the wa of folk-lore’ melodies t ha er been scored, but hvo been er accurs ndve immuuon il glsfled that she has tru!yw the spirit of Spanish nma whether this visit to nmy P e erre i m: a new in ture compositions remains to A 0] ~American musie,” .mpdnhdlt"()l hnsvl.hnhi:.l 1 Rsic has betn 1 -musician for centuries. The -i wornld i:rvmn‘ just wht huonll yl::’l!ntmcm

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