The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 22, 1929, Page 2

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2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY 1 1 H ( e HHHTH I T i | JUNEAU WINS ) 4 == = | | = N YT, ARY = 1 I El ic V. 1 = AN EXTR. DIN = ; | Electric Vacuum Cleaners = =| | | = § = E ROY AL = g g . — f HOOVER = = Bennie Messer Secures Cup| = 3 2 = for Juneau Third Succes- | BEEVAC = =| sive Time—Cup Stays | = FOR TWO DAYS ONLY = — AND = ==| For the third successive year Ju- | = et ot T T =l T GENERAL ELECTRIC W spring Loats -- New Iabics -- = east Declamation Contest when “ T Q ==|Bennie Messer, representing Ju- NEW Oty lL‘S. ==|neau, received the judge’s decision | S o i' | Zlin the contest held last evening in | | SOLD and RENTED 4 = A Bere 16 vy catel 3 AR AT ==|Eks Hall By winning last eve- > L= ‘ré 1S N at n thi —_ > =|E Y g e = Phere 1s no catch in this ad they are Z=Ining, Mr. Messer assured the cup| Rental payments can be applied on = new coats --- vou have seen them on our E“"" ey “‘"‘"‘“:”;‘”y- later cleaner purchases = - P -. = Winning Selection ysalite &= racks. at reoular prices up to ‘b-}“m) Z=| “The Murderer's Confession” by | = ’ 1Y H == |Edgar Allen Poe, given with ! A e e = A D 4 D Q NLY £ | dramatic o fon ‘and Tau | = I thought all of the | =| dia 1 thab the agl Plades : ~ B s, frie 5 Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. == [contest was close bebwee 1. ) = wiliam sarella, of Sitka, rave | Juneau Phone 6 Douglas Phone 18 == |the popular “Laska,” as his select- = |ion and did it very well. William ! = |Paul jr. representing Ketchikan, { ==|chose “Idols” for his competitive | e T e —— == | recitation and Herbert Mjorius, of ! Bt == | Petersbure, gave a splendid inter- | Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. ZZ | pretation of “The Unknown Speak- | Voot Daiens “i = o B e { Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: = B 1 > | Cloudy and warmer tonight, Tuesda: ssibly rain; oderate ==| Preceding the contest a musical 4 easterly winds. i roE i 0 e == program arranged by Miss Doro- o ! s = i it 5 ) i Uy LOCAL DATA g | T Pisner,’ mutoal Gireti of ith %c% W.’PMMMZ; W’“*%MMW | Time Barom. Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather == |Juneau schools, was given by an 2 B ) s Cflb{(& 1e chi | | 4 p. m. yest'y 30.10 55 2 s 3 Clear 3 £ |orchestra in which Miss Fisher Hhemse ~Tien fmu( and white, € QMFE chime dneod ine .to;iay e ] i AR posvie 23 == |played the piano, John Meggitt 3 B i o e 2 7 20, 36, 38, 40 == |played the C melody saxophone.| jy o neat affain with it5 while VLeA.CuL@Vl’() Mnsdez,,fl 2he Noon today ....3024 58 38 s 5 Pt Clay fety s R == |William Herriman, the alto saxo- = W ) sy S Reeeten alul) : . e £ | phone and George Hall the clarinet. | Akivhas a bias flounce jeined in LlgRov| N __CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS to miss this event == They played “Harvest Tide 'Ro- it evertopping 0 vighber~ ( - YESTERDAY T ~TODAY < = |mance” by Eugene Kaeutfer and| [Pt &Vevlepping 17 1 X S Highest § pm. | Low Sa.m. Sam. Precip. 8am, days, a select group of “Glondetier,” by James Urbanek. B e e e S Lo (T % B. D. Stewart, was chairman of | 5 2 e L R L 1 (s 7 H i 5 L , Nome ... o 24 | 4 20 . 0 Clear the contest, introduced the speakers 4 o . 9 A : Bethel " and announced the judges’ acis- | A DLALLON’ S Anniversary Foeaamnee e B I R O |fons. Judges for the contest were = & P | Tanana g 2% i ;¢ PR 0 Clear {Dr. Charles Bunnell, president of F l I I 5 B o| rage s AR T e SR S & ohae \ |the Alaska College; Rep. C. J mnas ine llblry' 00""'"\’3 st. Paul 3¢ 34 | 30 30 326 Trace 's(x::gfz Woofter, of Nome and Judge E —————— ———| Dutch Harbor ... 42 40 | 3 = ek Cldy N Coke Hill, who replaced Sen. A. J i 2 G 1 Kodiak . 42 40 | 36 38 0 58 Rai <t | Dimond, who was unable to be "V!\ibw ‘?’l‘i vApfl‘l 22 *J'“"”f (’{'f | cordoue 46 40 38 42 16 0 c;;; o A Y T iy Wilson, of Louisville, president o ¢ = in sizes ]() to -I»-} - \, 111\105 U}) to $15,00 Sades he ional . Aviation curpux'atmn‘ JK‘:::;:‘knn 3 gg f 3‘4 3_4 : 3 g::: ke B MR Avrd e Contestants drew for positions on |21 chairman of the Southern Air | Prince Rupert ... 60 60 | 36 3 ° 0 Clear For these TWO days only at ing proram, ks armuing s | (TSP corporation, s prepar: | Frines T B ool 5 place, Ketchikan second, Peters- [ 15 0 Publlsh What he consi Seattle Lotk Bembee S R 0 Clear [burg third, and Juneau fov BRIy el ‘Mo Portland TR RS AT T e N Clay ! 8 4 Mr. Willson is principal organizer { Whifln; ke roelttin was balg g . Willson is principal organizer San Francisco ... 58 56 | 48 48 10 08 Pt Cldy en, all other contestants were U'l; ot the Southern Alr Tran or - oow- s s | poration, a 1,500-mile | *—Less than 10 miles. = PE Teariog, o0 WuSY. ong NN L o anta obiic. Birmingham, | NOTE--Opservations at St. Paul, Dutch Barbor, Kodisk, Juneau, == ARIoncs 'd"f “"l“““,"" Dt Bl oW1 | New Orleans and the Texas cities | Prince Rupert, Edmonton, Seattle, Portland and San Frandisco are E L::.mjxfls;&::,, A(i(ryn:lw.I;ml\:u:l‘vn: of Beaumont, Houston, Galveston. ' Tnade at 4 a. and 4 p. m,, Juneau time. g = handed the slips with their decis- | % Antonio, Brownsville, Dall i Weeay T == SO Jori. the. b M S art e fort Worth, Waco, Austin and La The pressure is low south of the Alaska Peninsula and high from = soon as the last speaker had fin- >do. i | Norl.hgm and Eastern Al southward along the coast. The pres- o = i8hed He foresaw that nv:.x'xm.\. by it sure is Iullmg.modemtul): over most of Sculhwe_stem Alaska and ris- == Th; boys. were judged om four rery nature, would have little d ing in Southeastern Alaska and British Columbia. Rains have fallen — 5 A ficulty in overlcaping those phy: from Kodiak westward. Clear weather prevails in the Interior and g counts, being given the numk_lcr _Or cal and political barriers which cloudiness is increasing along the Gulf coast. Temperatures have D) = points for each that _”’E Judges |\, 5 been matters of first considera ricen except in the extreme southwest. = Hioughs they. had ‘emrued. - TR i 'the Wevalonment’ of Wl Bre. counts were, Interpretation of Se- 7 . TUESDAY AND L. M. Carrigan, sales representa- kan and Petersburg, and is here AR RO = x lection, subdivided into characters v“(’;:;];(‘(:]r:;”(; :‘:‘mr:‘l::i(? l;: :: . < tive for southern commercial hous- | to establish a buying branch at the :’é ” 4 > iw‘;ifi A fir ifi WI Y and llhuug;“ i Vloxlr-t?. fx ra‘md.or livitles to New Vork and sllfed JAMES C. WILLSON e;{s',‘tvgu_ a remx:;mg-tpassex}gzl rrofxi Juneau Cold Storage. = YO ALYy JA ) ! Z f?e(‘; h, 4&:} @ t]:.unos{s -amb " Iiimeelt with ‘the international = 5 B t('.n an on the steamer miral ~Tdfi0—lo-f—t = | tinction; Expression, a, force, b, sroup of aviation enterprises cen- ., PR atson. Henry Roden, ocal_ attorney, re- = tality, and ¢, proper emphasis; and tering around the personality of| - e T bed | —_———— turned from Ketchikan on the - = L i sisla T PR % i |fourth, Stage Appearance, a, poise.| n £ i ; . 5 J E B laskan representa- Admiral Watson. Mr. Roden has o= 1 Approvaits No Exchanges No Refunds | % S tawe | Clement M. Keys. HUNGARY WOULD FORCE . E. Berg, Alaskan represen A = \() S.‘ prov al o Exc 14angc {b. personality, c, ease and stage |, iition's iver annive BIRTH RATE INCREASE | |tive for the Marlyn Fish Brokerage been in the First City on business. = ‘pro.spns& 5 vrites, “has just been c e {Company of Seattle, arrived here TS = The judges were not informed of R g i " 'y | e e v o= | _ _ = t finds 15,000 miles of airways in BUDAPEST, April 22—The | |on a Sunday steamer. Mr. Berz| AERJAL VIEWS OF JUNEAU ] the identity of Y of the contes- peration, more than 1200 flying | Government's attempt to take | |is in charge of offices in Ketchi- | Alaska Scenic Views adv. = ° ° e ren 9 . jtants unkl after 1t was all over,fyoiqe'oier £806 Hemtised planed and| | legal steps against chiidless | T — = ; jand the boys w;\:—c indicated only 1,500 licensed pilots. The air families has aroused the op- 3€ Juneaw's Leading Department Store |by ""mb“spg:‘r (‘fl‘,n&’:“""“' n 1929 will require more than 40- | Position of a group of dis- = | ‘Toere whs @ fair-sisad crowa at |9 Mlles Of Gying eich aryr || tguishel tewrers | NEW 1 ¢ 1 S ' ! | 2 % In the years he has been in New | . ‘:_} e B | B0 R PRAMAMEDY cm contese osicerims that it was | I8 Che sears he has becn repa.| | history shows mo Instance of | | | i It 2 We make ana amer all kinds of announced for yesterday afternoon a Covernment requiring citi- HALIBUT SELLS HERE AT 105 AND 6 CENTS tation as an aggressi > executive i and a power in the cou e zens (o give the State children. | rapidly growing industry but one |, . must look for these things behind . ents. Goldstein’s Em |80d was postponed until evening 15 B —ady, |by the laté arrival of the steamer |Alameda” on which the Ketchikan e ¢ " |MILL WOOD for everybody. See and Petersburg contestants came. % > . the cargo ‘permer. Bhone 114, ddy s a hospitable, unhurried, Kentucky | ern, at 10.5 and 7 cents. | manner. It ; e e | POSIES FOR SCHOOLROOMS | Another item porium. A total of unds of hali-!p but sold at the J . Cold Stor- | Juan tool J. E. Berg, buying for of ——————— Butterfly | . Skirts in a variety of colors. Le exemp: from paying school o axes ¥ Italy a father must have! Is “greatest 10 children, all living and of Italian | i ) 3 2 1133 N 7 IMPE A | story” is production. i ity. PREPARE FOR LOUISIANA IMPEACHMENT TRIAL ' | . e i v conen 0 RO o, |, o | i | e 300," he | & * . -, has demanded flowers in all Paris|United States in 1925 was 3 3 9| schoolrooms and school yards to|:ays. = “In 1927 it was 2000 and |brighten the existence of children |in 1928 it had risen to 5000 He 3 |at school. pictures aviation's swift trend to- ward consolidation of the sort OTHER LOT OF Speciall riced at that other forms of transportation ! b & Y P required many years to achieve. C ANNED With the Curtiss group in the fore- | $4 95 grotind as an example, he describes 3 an industry that is beiny mouldea GOODS fromi the start on a gigan:ic nation- | al ‘and international scale. i # i Included in the Curtiss-Keys | Packed in clean, sanitary group are 19 separate aviation en-!| cans by Ben Bullard at . terprises. Five of these are con- Taku, Alaska cerned ,with engineering and man- * " z ufacturing; three with sales and! mebe"w& No. 2, 35c, service; three with transportation 3 for $1.00 | i and slx with the finaneing of new | Raspberries, No. 2, 35¢, 3| air industries. for $1.00 “The group is not {ightly bound Blueberries, No. 2, 38¢, 2| together in a rigid framework of for 75¢ i corporate bu‘l?sidaries and central Try these for Pies or — management,” he states, “foc the Shorcake airplane industry is growing so 9 fast that individual initiative and Rhubarb, N?.' 2, 23¢, 2 for | 3 senius play & larce part o 1| 15 smls OUR SERVICE He lists a “who's who" of 191 Sauce for Breakfast | men prominent in every branch of or Pies aviation and related enterprises, 4 who have been assembled as the EXTENDS ALL OVER executives and directors of the in- THE WORLD Pilot Harold Bromley who says | ternational group. { Sanitar 3 he will attempt a nonstop flight SR st s ] y i from Tacoma, Wash,, to Tokio as 4 3 i Frank Harrigan of Arkansas City, g g eath it 7 s | &L‘i—_" “nf' WIP o p.rmfi.‘ Kas., opefared his radio at “unrea- u Grocery . New, select line of visiting cards | Sypiabion, & hatel corged (Ko M0 THE : ew, seiec ng cards | gtricklen, a hotel owner. Stricklen . 4 ; : : : 44 |3t The Empire. sought an injunction against the PHONES 83—85 z : T PUSER e — radio fan, L > B k ¥ i Above: Clerk of Louisiana house of representatives reading before the bar of the conate the Dell k. mnensi, suneauws plano B oo b “The Store That F wrst Natwnal an ; ‘vlmpun:'m t Indlnmentla‘g:’inst Gov. Hucy P. Long. Below: Members of house of reprosentatives | tuner and rebuilder. Fhone 573 *UR ZXFERT i Pleases” "boui managers appointed to conduct the impsachment Left to richt: Repracaniatives ————.- ot ] | {4 Sanders, Cocll Margan, Lavinius L. Wilira, Georoe Ginssérg, harisa B. Reberts, A P, Frymire, LET Awmuiss Press Your Sutt.|mnt 4 charee o e o | B OF JUNEAU ¢ nder, 2 h ] | gentes Bydar; aeres K. Eerrautt and Paul E. Chasgs We cul sad deliver. - Phone 528 (urtier. Gosel's. Bmporiam, 04—

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