The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 29, 1929, Page 2

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"THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1929. IIIIIlIIll"IIIHIIIIlHIIIIVIIIVIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllNllllllfmlil:-IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIII|I|I|IIIIIIIIlllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll_l truly live as brother and swords shall be beaten into ploughshares. [ able conditions at Petersburg too Local U. S.Epeclor Mov-| ed South—Capt. Mor- gan Coming Here . | Capt. George Tyler, Inspector of' Hulls and member of the local| Board of U. S. Steamboat Inspec-| tors, has been transferred to the NOTE —Onservations av St. Paul, Dutch Harbor, Kodiak, 'Juneau, Prince Rupert, Edmonton, Seattls, Portland and San Fianvisco are made at 4 a. and 4 n. m., Juneau time. The pressure remains lowest in the Yukon Valley and continues to rise in Alaska. It is highest west of Oregon and is falling slight- ly in the Pugte Sound region. Showers have fallen in the Yukon Valley, Southeastern Alaska and British Columbia. With the excep- tion of Prince William Sound, temperatures have fallen slightly in Alaska during the past twenty-four hours INCORPORATED Operating in All Parts of Southeastern Alaska FLIGHTS MADE TO ANY POINT DESIRED long, it wil move to Sitks and Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. H map Kuiu and all of Baranof and we 5 Chichago- 1siands. This could Weather Bureau . be done in 10 days or two weeks Forecast for Juncau and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: = T’l ) Dle(l T’l(’t if conditions were favorable for the g p H ¢ y aerial work. If conditions should showers tonight and possibly Thursday; gentle variable winds. s : c & 75 s w ' be unfavorable the time would be LOCAL DATA & W e Ml lrht Ll've, considerably longer = t" After mapping these areas, it. is| Time parom. Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 2 the tentative plan to move the| 4 p. m. yest'y 29,8 4“ 80 SE 12 Sprinkling 8 & 4 % squadron and its tender vessel,! ¢ a, m. today 39 95 N 2 cldy || E Memcrial Day! The very sound brings Gannett, to Juneau, From here Noon today a1 81 SE Cldy = poignant mcmories to most of us, for he mappers will cover the main- & - = = B g ] CABLE ANDG RADIO RErORTS ] who that has lived through the last S|land , shores of Icy Strait, Lynn : = ARk £|Canal and areas immediately ad- YESTERDAY T TODAY -] war can forget the noble sacrifices Z|jacent to Juneau, including Taku Hignest € pra. | Low 8am. Sam Preclp. Sam | = ol Shee Stations— temp. _temp. [ _ temp. temp. Velccity 24 hrs. Wea ¥ = made by those who staked all that Am- = River. o eds. rings Mattresses = jde 38 TR appiness and H S| Mr. Zeller is here on a regular| Barrow 38 9 p g . < = erica might live in happiness and pros Z | ishection o - ringer districts, Hej Nome 48 32 | 28 32 - 0 Cldy b = S -] o a stricts. : cldy = perity. . .. Today the cannon have been S| will be here and . in this viclnigy| Bethel 48 40 R R 0 F g stilled, fading fast are cven the mem- Elabout two, weeks, and will make; Fort Yukon :’[” :g | :‘6’ Z; i 22 Céf;; OLDING COTS FOR CAMP USE H ories of carnage; and the world is unit- S|one or more trips to nearby dis- T“"}‘:”“ ey g i Cldy = e ig i s 3 Veraal £ |tricts, and possibly as far as Yaku- Eagle b by | b 3 o Cidy ing in efforts to effect universal peace £/tat, with Ranger Harold Smith, ls_):tg;m]l-mmr 4 i g: & iy o J 1’ . b PR el gy« SRR " e D0 8L 8 % 5 o eaw| Juneau Young Hardware Co. beautiful ideal, we must not forget he ] N R Cordova 46 44 36 36 4 18 Cldy “It It's Hard e brave soldiers whese dauntless courage H | Junean 7 o 38 39 i = g:g; t It's Hardware We Have It F ; ¢ iv Hav s way = g2 % Ketchikan 58 — 45 — ; and love of (uunh.} paved the way to E S tabh RiA R 5 4 bE 8 i1 Rain This Store Will future progress. Setting out on battles 2 W 10y Eamonton 72 7 foge g - 0 Pt gfiy ——— 1oa or right causes, giving their lives for e ; Seattle 58 58 48 50 . 0 y ; . :h(i Lfcll( WS, 1h’g\' have brought us H UNG;D‘ Portland - BRG Sncill. SER SR ¥ Clgy ; ; s s ; . e iint g i : s = | San Francisco ... 62 58 50 8. ° 0 Cldy Al k .W h o A merial Day. nearer the gcod time when men shall H Nuw ANNU b i‘ *—less than 10 miles. aska as "ncton lr'"’“ys B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneaw’s Leading Department Store I o T U T MU UL O I | forward with confidence to coloni- | citizens who help to advance your commonwealth to greatnes H AN Is | “The Mormon Church has done a TU Mqu HERE lot of colonization from the very history, and it its efforts toward colonizing in ag- ricultural regions.” Bishop Sloan is a handsome man of large intelligence and very pleas- He will be here about Mapping Expedition to Work Out of Petersburg and Sitka First 1t will be at least two weeks and possibly longer before Naval Air Mapping Expedition moves here to establish its base, according to ten- Bishop Sloan in Juneau to Familiarize Himsel wils-Alkks | k. To Hold Meetings | Mectings will be held Thursday To check up on mormon Church|end Sunday evenings at £ o'ciock work in Alaska and to confer with{at the Odd ¥Peiiows hall. Bishop mi ries of the church in the!Sloan will speak at each of the field, Bishop W. R an, President | meetings, and it is his desire that | new Grays Harbor district with headquarters at Hoquiam, Wash.,| according to an Assoclated Press| despatch received by The Empire | today from Seattle. It was con-| firmed by the local Board. ; Capt. Tyler's successor, Capt.| Geoarge Morgan, formerly assistant | Inspeetor of Hulls, at Seattle, will arrive here June 4, to take over the local post. He is an oldtime | Alaska pilot who has been connect- ed with the U. S. Steamboat In-| spection Service for a number of years, serving at Philadelphia, Port- members of the Board, Capt. John Newmarker, Inspector of Boilers, and Secretary Leroy Vestal, to Bris- tol Bay and other western areas Capt. Tyler will go to Seattle and proceed to Hoquiam to his new sta- tion as soon as he is relieved. AT ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL Jonn Bersin, of the Admiral Rog- ers crew, entered the hospital last | | LUDWIG NELSON TAKES !lightful concert, of Brunswick rec- ords played on the new Panatrope machine with outside loud speaker| Roast ] | OVER BRUNSWICK AGENCY |attached. The loud speaker was installed early last evening by| ! People near Ludwig Nelson’s Jew- {Mr. Nelson, after which he gave |eiry Storc on Front Street last ’F {the impromptu concert. pound URKEY { Mr. Nelson is the Juneau agent evening were entertained by a de- r the Brunswick machines and, | |machines and records are kept. In| Would be raw. |addition to the all-electric demon-| . SR stration machine he has a cabinet; Sfi:FEgnl":gstfid \}:d‘cjy(]itn: 3]':; | machine for sale and a number of some overdone. Hills Bros. lmrmbles' Coffee, however, is famous for its | Commercial job » 5 at Th?' uniform flavor. It is roasted by | Empire. | a patented, continuous process | ! —only a few pounds at a time. Every berry — every pound is roasted evenly. And you taste a We Specialize on Office in Gross Building PHONE 64 LARRY PARKS, Juneau Agent To the “Class of 1929” Perhaps you plan to go to College—We first days of its land and finally at Seattle. % : i H has produced a race of developers. | ABUUT jUNE 15 Capt. Morgan will not remain| Some of it [records anc has @ iittle room in| Hie 2% o h il dsset—IF Heretofore the Church has confined here, but continue with other the rear of his store where the| you do, you are going to need a type- writer— Call79 And ask for our special offer of the Northwestern States Mis- of the missionaries that have, been tative plans made by its leader, f"““f“(‘l‘ Kbl et s “"‘ matchless flavor in every cup. 717 “slyn of, the Mormon Church, is!cngaged in'the Alaska work for the) Commander A. W. Radford, and R. injures ‘“~~h §oei W’wle Mllk B B e in Junéfli He arrived here on|l that there be a large at- H. Sargent, representing the Inter-| Peter, Johanson of tha Roger HILLS BROS J. D. Durror 0. the Alaska, comir which is the hecad Northwestern The Northw om Portland | tenda the ior Department and topographer, dition to t'ic speaking there according to R. A. Zeiler, Supervis- or of Tongass National Forest, who has arrived here. He conferred rs of In iwill be a few riusical numbers at the jecach of the meetings. crew entered the hospital for treat- ment for an infected hand. O. T, Michaelson, a member of the Rogers crew, is receiving treat- ment for a sore hand at the hospi- COFFEE [ o uny porst Fresh from the orig- | “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers”™ CF TS T AN SPBI SRR S L Mormon Church co; s of the| - {with both Commander Radford and tal inal_vacuum pack. DAIRY west half of Montana, the Idaho| pive hundred persons attended|Mr. Sargent while they were in 3 Emly”'o‘y;:? with — Panhandle, Oregon, Washington, |the Commencement exercises at|Kétchikan. o % gt 01929 x i MRS. HANNA British Columbia and Alaska. It Cordova of the high school gradu-| Work will be done out of both i 14 A Ph"‘;;e s i PHONE 204 E. P. Harwood deliv-|Petersburg and Sitka before the squadron comes here for operations, i 1S Mr., Zeller said. How long it will contains, according to Bishop Sloan, 'ating class. 16,000 members of the Mormon gred the principal addr Church, and there are 1} mission- | ey s. aries laboring in the field in behalf of the church, each giving from two to three years gratuitiously for the church, raid Bishop Sloan, who E. G. Moore, better known in|take depends almost entirely on the Interior as “Dinty” Moore, has| Weather conditions encountered. It resigned as official clerk at the may take ten days or twe weeks, or headquarters of the Mt. McKinley it may require several times that We call end deliver. Qg A 2D RRTRN IR . 7o @ 25 ORD) e X (1 oo 'J.r% ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave HousgL, PRoP. continued: P “Among these missionaries are students, bank ‘clerks, farmers, doc- tors and men in ail walks of life. “The work of the mission is National Park, and is off for Seat- 'long if conditions are unfavorable tle to join his father in the min-!for aerial photography and flying. ing business. The expedition has established a e e ibase at Petersburg. It is planned Turtle soup is no luxury to the to map from the air Kuiu Island growing rapidly. During the last| people of Ocracoke, N. C. Huge sea and the southern end of Baranof year $232,000 were spent for chapels turtles weighing 200 pounds fre-|Island. Then it will move to Sit- —the larger part of which, suo,ooalqucntly are caught in fish nets. ka, or, if it meets with unfavor- was for a magnificent chapel at g North Coast Limited’ “In addition to checking up on\ the work in Alaska I am making ! - Threugh Train hicago The Three Piece PAJAMA SUIT In Crepe Featuring a three quarter length coat—a slip on blouse—and swagger trousers. IS SISV USSR familiarize myself with the condi- tions here and qualify myself to aid in making way for more mis-| sionary work in the Territory. | “The first work of the Mormon | Church in Alaska was in 1913 when | two missionaries were sent to Ju-| neau.. They were here for a few | weeks, and did a lot of investigat- ing. No systematic work was donc | here, however, unti May, 1928, when | four missionaries were sent into f‘ the Territory. They and others ] have labored continuously since that { ‘time with gratifying results. I Baye had weekly reports from then | and it has been, indeed, pleasant o to note the candid reception that‘ T 47 5 has been tendered them by Gov. HIS famous transcontinental train gives you ‘tnodern . Gearge A. Parks, Territorial Secre- | travel comfort and convenience. New-type deepenmz‘ tary Karl Theile, the various Cham- | spring mattresses; observation-club car, a triumph of huxury bers of Commerce, leading citizens,! Northern Pacific diners serving “Famously Goos" meals. ] | H etc. . I.feel that you must have a| B A E Extra Comforts—No Extra Fare Leaves Seattle Daily i splendid citizenry in Alaska, judg- | ing from the reports which have KARL K. KATZ, Alaska Representative 200 L. C. Smich Bldg., Seattle B e received detalled refots North.em P Railwa from these missionaries of your in . b *First of the Northem T Entirely charming in the whole—as a soft- ly colored lounging pajama and equally as smart in any of its component functions—the independent coat or blouse and trousers. my initial trip to this Territory to — In white with color combinations of pastel shades. 33 L2, e m&?}%@:%g ‘v ot ==0r" »! HEA &) ? % 04%557%)?51‘ Skrip, successor to ink abolishes pen clogging By a score of scientific tests this new product establishes itself as probably the greatest improvement ever made in writing fluids, 'Washable Skrip for school and special work demonstrates a smooth and brilliant colour, yet washes out of clothing easily. Permanent Skrip, for record work, tenaciously holds its legibility. Both flow freely and evenly at all times, without flooding, dry quickly \ on the paper, but will not dry on the pen point or clog the flow. See that your fountain-pen is given a to use this great fluid. Skrip makes all pens write bet- ter and the Lifetime® pen write best. Try it today. Washable Skrip—in blue, green, violet, red and black—Also Permanent Royal Blue Skrip. At better stores everywhere. SHEAFFER'S PENS*PENCILS*SKR W. A.SHEAFFER PEN CO., FORT MADISON, IOWA, U. 8. A, ( dustries, and other development,' i your splendid school system. 1 ! have learned that you have a world ! I of undeveloped resources that must | OUR SERVICE EXTENDS ALL OVER THE WORLD 3 someday attract young Americans from the States. I am convinced' that your leading men may look ST B 1 Announcing Goat’s Milk Ice Cream Made of PURE FRESH, WHOLESOME CREAM, FRESH MILK AND EGGS On Sdle At Juneau Ice Cream Parlors T e T e T T LT T - First National Bank OF JUNEAU ¥ |0ld Papers for sale at Empire Office o ) Ry L

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