The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 19, 1929, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPiRF ATURDAY, JAN 19, 1929, Bl S "BA‘RN‘EX GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUC 3 By BII LE DE BECK ! SEWL oy THE MAN'S COURAGE - N GRINIGRS HE WAS ONE | /> ! \'\r'(mw #90 BOUNDS —WHY, MR GO6GL! N TS GRANEST MEN THAT \ - HOW ABOLY L He WAS MAGNFICENT 2 Ragit NN SR . i F t i i csmf‘sme %Lgr:;:!d?u'& ' CAN NOU THINR OF ANY i / e 60‘!‘“& > i urnl ur - | %E"“’R“‘G\,EE (T o= ‘AS COURAGEOUS * ! Wdo ATe - . i O e _ v , | CHAIRS—ROCKERS—TABLES—BEDS and DAYBEDS—SIMMONS MAT- TRESSES—SIMMONS SPRINGS MONS BE.\UTYREST MATTRESSES THE r Thomas Hardware Co. Juneau, Alaska w S IRl o e i 7 R G SR AT e Tl O R S SRR © VT e WOMEN AT HEAD OF OIL COMPANY, .. Howss of Lors Sesa Churs To Regani Old Power L. D. hAMMOCK. vay Pastor NAMED FOR 11 - YEAR i OLD ' GIRL} (Continuea —x:ur;\“f’auP One.) Juneau Lumber M ills, Inc. Lumber For Every Purpose - i Sunday School 10:30 to 11:30 . m. Regular Sunday services 11:30 /8. m. to 12:30 p. m. {tive knights of s and rep- Specializing in ;xesonmln‘ps of th ywnspeople. ASQUERADE DATE CHANGED ' ifness PARADE" AT || 5 s 7 LIBERTY 'SUNDAY ® Wednesday, February 6, is the .l _pew. date set for the masked danco| Donald » . lanned by the Douglas Island|Pathe-DeMille, “Dre chambers have a membership th &'flmflll's Club. The change i5 made|deals with the various acu is almost wholly elect exee! b4 t is hoped will be most success- adapted to the screen by Dougl | —— - Your needs promotly supplied from ouv complete stock ul. Six prizes are to-be on2 of| Doty, and it brings to.ths s The average father is onc who p il én account of their former datefof a cadet at tha United in the Spanish and Italian | he features of the danc 'a real picture of the life of a c;.u’ would rather continue, to w his We handle {As it mow: stands the English p oy st o il Best grades of Spruce and conflicting with a dance in Juneau. | Mi Academy at West Point.; Ji& : 4 : : e R o : ates, in which a few h SRR det from morning to night. own old suit, even if is so CEMENT, SHINGLES, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY entirefyef horeditary peers is al Committees are now working on| was written by nohles it with the nomin GETTING AROUND } Each officer and cadet shiny he needs ekid chains on it of the world, All other similar o rrangements for the affair graduates of the demy, being! elected senators. ook ed at the Academy at Wes “to. keep from skidding Off (ho | wm—— ————. 77777,_,_7____—_-:'f£ ) ! partially cripplea with a frac-| cooperated Mr. chairs, than take son’s cast-off f - N § shoulder as the result of|membors funny college clothes. car accident Thursday, Joo|exte R0 Riedi getting along fine and 15 buildings, includis \ "’ ORI ith his good arm is partially able Main Administration Building, ! VIOLIN INSTRUCTIONS 1 m attend to his regular duties.|lum Hall; Mess Hall and other| By Mrs. Klondy N. Dufresne | i #The injured arm will have to beipoints of interest, and at last a; Studio opens January 25th kept in a sling for five or sixjreal story of West Point hi en ! Marshail Duplex, 6th and | iweeks. picturized. The picture will be| Main. Teiephone 53 | i e [the feature at the Liberty for to-| 1 i BARBER SHOP RE-SOLD { morrow | — — - —31 L 4 e » »-is feature? Umm«vik[ e ? Y. Shitanda, proprietor of the and other iaembe . a‘w! réstaurant has purchased thelof the cast include Hnugi Allan, terest. ef A. Lindquist in the|Louis Natheaux, Clarence Geldert barber shop housed in the rear ofland Maurice Ryan. The picture *his building and a new man to|is said to be packed with thrills. iy : amed for 11-year-old Mary Jane Foulston ( Women hold all cffices in 2 oll {cf Wichita, Kas. The officers in the pro |7. Rinehart (rear, Icft) Trieasurer; (frent xow, lcft) Vice-President, and Aileen C. Erown, com p at the ‘eft, are Flora H. Crump (center), President; Sylvic er C: Sm'th (rear, right), Secrctery; Eunice D. Fitzpatrick nt Secretary-Treasurer. Mrz, Mar- \® take charge of the tomsorial busi- AN S o A garet S. Gay (insat), ancther Wichita woman, heais an cperating company. fiosy Bapins sought. B | W[CHITA, Kas., Jan. 19.—Men|tho corporation. The other ofti-|land. When Mrs. Gay sald sh } TCO MANY FIREMEN | |are not alome in d@eveloping the|cers are Eunice D. i2k | would try to obtain ! MRS. HEWITT ILL | IS TOWN'S PROBLEM 1,6y found oil wealth in part | vico-president; Esth b |farm, friends warr " {of southern Kan | sceretary: SYivi would be sho | { WL e 11 WESTPORT, Conn.,, Jan. ok | Vi are i he pi re, | { § Mirs. A Hewitt who was auite|| 19 Tpo many cooks spoil || ‘Vomem (oo, are in the pictur g Caahan 3is. . Watihs 4 | ¢ 3 for & tew days ta's sreex, is To-| | the - brothy.rand.=toa, -many | (224 the Mary Jane Oll company, sistant sec s mot| ported . considerably better. || firemen at & fire aré likely || With ‘all its officers “women, al-| Op ; e ¥ S U S to spoil almost everything. |ready has brought in a producing|entery in giasd B | | So many townsmen were | |Well [ére. civhn 8 woman care for her children, who'l ¢ LECTURE TONIGHT enrolled as volunteer firemen | | The company was christened by | instance, Mrs ret '8 6 1. Bl Vs BevL "k s e T AR | here that when there was a | |Robert C, Foulston, a sawyer who|the president, general managor A T e e R Theodora Tolletsen will give fire the response of smoke- | |drew up the articles of incorpora-|chairman of the board of a §100- 1.“‘” e o Bahen W] free lecture tonight at the Lib-l | eqterg was so large that they | ticn honor of his 1l-year-old|000 operating company. S s B s, el i g erty theatre on a local subject of| | wot in each other's w At Mats “datie | ganizea the Gay Ol corporation| ! 30 days, and Mrs. '““Tl" o > importance, it is said. Crappling with the situati Stenegraphers in the office of |after 20 successful years as an in ifl“]" super wl"u l\w(x he “‘t-.‘ : | brought about by civic zeal, | | Fouiston's law firm who had ac-|dependent operator. R R Ll S E the fire chief solved the | {quired shares in the new organiza-! Mrs. Gay facing the responsibil ‘;“ i Hy indey ird = 4 problem by an order that | |tion, were elected to all the places|ity of supporting and educating | fihancially independent. Oug [ | only firemen with duty |Jon its board of dircctors and given|three children, set out to buy and| Since thon' Mrs. Gay has taken ‘, 3 | badges should be allowed | |all the executive offices. The|sell oil leases in:Oklahoma, Her(part in ‘the development of oil Church | within the lines at fires. | girls turned over to a firm of drill-| first prospective client was a far- fields in Texas, Oklahoma and . e % /ing operators the management of mer who had the reputation of Kansas. Her two soms also havc S R the company's affairs. | being led” with perso ,tw ome oil drillers, learning the er’vwes .Coolldge and Hoover Flora H. Crump is president ofisopk!ny m rights on h qumen from their mother. | 1 —pe— e —— it b By . o SRS —— , S——————</| Hold Third Conference [1ter, 48, a grandmother and moth { Notices tor this ¢hurcn column Mwh G ler of 10 children was found guil- {must be receivel by The Bmpire| WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—Her- lgan overnor |ty of her fourth liquor offensc mot later than 10 o’clock Satur-/bert Hoover called today for a M ‘[‘ho sentencing of Ch ie Tripp Jday morning to guarantee change|third conference with President avors (1] l, wng f Flint to life for his fourth {sf_sermon topics, ete. Coolidge since his return, to P 29 |iiguor law violation kept th . b gt g Washington. They were together Li f f Pi I 3| izsue afire [ Do ins Presiioan Tative 110" 30 minutes and discussed at tre-ror-i int”” Law B ] 4 ougias rmm:mn o Coolidge’s request, desirability of | B et ission enlarging the Executive Officés. [ i i e |eriminal provisicn in filing in- ; { = 2 — a | formation aaginst Alec Zach and { #5 B3 % | Sunday scnocs—2:30 p. m. SR i BEY s El |tor his fourth offense he went to - &% % SR I8 &y Berson: At ¥:18 D m. | PARIS PAUPERS DRINK | piison for-only a vear. ‘ { ! 7km:¢r:yerm;;l’r:"“dsy—um {| LAKE OF BEER YEARLY Legislatcrs, many of whom vot- iee: § e ed for the law, now want it All are cordially weicome ‘to PARIS, Jan. 19, — The { changed, declaring they did not these services. 3 .Purls poor, th_use who live | realize it applied to liguor viola-| N pET H in benevolent institutions at | tions when it was considered e — ~=— ——=—#3| | the expense of the State, | | 3 8 ! ! se ate, | | The State Anti-Saloon League| 4 £ ”lell! Catholic Charch |' drink 2,839,000 litres, over | is the staunchest champion of the | . llp < ¥ ¥ All services in tne new church.| | 700,000 gallons of beer a code. | ave ou nyt ll’lg tO . 5 { Mass at 9 a. m. , ! | year. Amending the code is bother-| .- 1:00 p.m.—Sunday School. | Such are the figures which 1| ing lawmakers. The vernor 1 . 9 | No evening services. | two great breweries of Paris | | desires to classify the ; that Do l ou ant to uy nyt lng. b ) ’ s | have undertnkx:}ln by contract are punishable with lite terms, or o 3 . >- e 11 | to supply to the Public As- | | exempt such offenses as liquor . + [ 8t. Lukes Episcopal “hurch | | | sistance Institutions during | {narATing and alimony dodging DO You Wfl"t to dee An thln ? 8 I G v | the year 1929, The section under considera- ! t ‘ . | The beer ccsts @ little less | Evening Prayer and Sermon,‘ | than 3 cents a quart. i L ]'1:30 o'clock,” W 5 tion reads: “Any person who, after having| been thfee times convicted with-| in this State of felonies, or & IF YOU DO THEN v tempts to commit felos | v under the law of any other Sta government or country f imes 4 b Mrs. Edith Moc Hiller (left), mother of 10 childre which if committed in thi ' : : been found guilty of hey fourth liguor offense under the Mi 1/ would be felonies, commits a fel r se habitual criminal law, and sentenced to life in prison. Gov. Fred omy within this State, t be P W. Green (right) advocates that the law be modified to some ;L‘"t::ced upon conviction of such extent. cur! or subsequent offense to & $ i g FERE a2 SUNDAY NIGHT A S e i bt limprisonment in a State prison 3.8 - for the term of his natural life.” 4 By GILBERT T. SHILSON _ slaced where they cannot menace 4 : (Associated Press Correspondent) | society. | R Aaidoactivo; life for : W ILLIAM Y LANSING, Mich, Jan. 18| mpo popie i ooiinht taw was | [OUFEh offense even though the . s v inal law W3%lother three erhmes were commit- A criminal code, so stern in its, written into the statutes in. 1927. 1o p, ;s penalties for habitual offenderS{fs 'had been recommended by o ' -0 Defofe the law was cnacted. 9 that a grandmcther faces lifelgpecial commission named by the A DRESS PARAD o e i ST AmD e e Use Classified or Dis h}elxs r;)g‘;;ed natilonal laulehntinsnt o:l Green urged its passage. Ncw “A good old Hard Time Dance’ | Se y . the sesslon o e State|¥ork’s Baumes law was taken as at Moose Hall, Saturday night,| 4 y - with BESSIE LOVE Legislature. R - g eafurdsy night] E h B R us The State lawmakers have been : jJanuary 19th. Ladies are re acC r.«ng esu The law’s application to liquor 'quested to wear aprons. Every- law violators became apparcnt body welcome. Moonlight Seren- when Fred Palm of Lansing was aders have been engaged with sent te prison for life for boot-'some good music with a kick that legging, his fourth offense. The will make the dance something statute was dubbed “the life f0r to be remembered. At Moose Hall, a pint” In Michigan the Palm January 19th. —adv. case attracted little attention be-| et —— cause Palm’s criminal record was, () - League retorted that liquor law |iong. | For Carpenter Work of amy violatcrs are no better than othér| The controversy became nu- k or eity—Call Handy Mb. ‘that M ‘should M MI when Mrs, Etta Mae Mil- Andy, 498, importuned to soften the feature which provides for a life term for a fourth violation cf the pro- hibition laws. Gov. Fred W. Green and other State officials have advocated re- moving some of the harshness from the law. The Anti-Saloon You’ll regret missing this the finest picture production of the current season. . g ._._.a-——-.-_aa:. ¢ Also DUMMY LOVE——-Comedy full of laughs and NEWS opens the show NOTICE—The “ads” in the Empire contain good news each day for man and woman. Read them—Read thém carefully—They are News. Remember our Job De- partment can print anything—large or small. - T T ml|HmmIIRflfl“flll"llfl"llflflfllllflll|!m|l|IINflIIII‘IHHIIIM““MMHIIWHIMIIIIIIHIBHHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII!II WU

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