The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 14, 1929, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE FRIDAY ]UNE 14, 1929. Red Hot Specials For Saturday There's Real Comfort in Our Men’s Womens cma’ Childrens SHOES Reduced ONE-THIRD at $23.34 (were $35) at $26.67 (were $40) at $30.00 (were $45) at $33.34 (were $50) at $36.67 (were $55) at $40.00 (were $60) Growing Girls’ Oxfords In tan and black—Regular $6.00 pair For Saturday Only $4.95 pair Chlldren s Oxfords “5°to gat’ 8% to'11 at 1114 to '2+at For Saturday Only P s o s 4 oys’ Caps oy Cap Real Value—Assorted Colors All'Sizes—Good Patterns $1 25 each Tennis Shoes " Lace’ to the Toe Gray Tennis are just the thing Size 5 to 8 at Size 814 to 11 at Size 111%°'to 2 at Men’s Summer Underwear Athletic style or short sleeves and long legs. A real bargain for hot summer days. Special $1.00 suit Men’s Heavy Work Shoes For real service—a real work shoe Special for Saturday $3.95 pair 1 Unusual Values in Canned Foods For Saturday Only FISHER’S BLEND FLOUR 49 Ib sacLs for $2 3§' ea(:h HAPPY HOME CRAB MEAT 38 cents per can LIBBY S TOMATO JUICF 20 cents per can CA\IADA CREAM CRAC KERS 28 cents per carton LIBBY’S PICKLES Home-made style, sweet, sweet mixed, sweet mustard 20 cents each FRESH CREAMERY BDTTER 50 cents pound ‘\I ALLEY’S COMBIN ’\TION SALAD DRESSING Half pints, 20 cents " REGINA BRAND SARDINES | In Pure Olive Oil 15 cents or 7 for $1.00 LIBBY’S TOMATO CATCHUP "* 20 cents each LIBBY’S BONELESS SUGAR CURED HAMS Ready to sérve for your Sunday dinner---3 and 8 pounds Spec1ai at 60 cents and 65 cents NALLEY S MAYONNAISE 58 cents a quai’t LIBBY’S SPAGHETTI None better, 3 for S() cents LIBBY’S SALAD POINTS New Pack, 30 cents can or 3 for 85 cents ROSE DALE EXTRA LARGE CALIF ORNIA RIPE OLIVES 21 cents pint Now is the time to buy MARSHMALLOWS Special for Saturday at 30c Ib. . Behrends ¢ Juneau s Leading Departmfint Store PR Vi | Cordova 38 :cuwuma IS |rowed, Richard Gelndon’s Columbia | |varsity, junior varsity and fresh-| |men crews will go up the Hudson ' Wenther Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneam and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: Cloudy tonight and Saturday; light variable winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 p. m. yest'y ... 2987 54 60 s 5 Rain 4 a. m. today 29.88 46 91 NE 2 Cldy Neon today . 29.84 56 70 SE 2 Pt. Cldy CABLE AND RADIO REYORTS YESTERDAY ) B, StETERDAY . Highest 4 pum. Low 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. ) emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weather C'dy Stations— Nome | 38 .04 Cldy Cldy Cldy Rain Port Yukon 4 Tanana | 40 Eagle 48 St. Paul 33 Kodiak 42 K Cldy | 3 Cli!y Juneau X 4“4 4 Cldy Ketchikan 52 . Cldy Prince Rupert | 44 2 Cldy Edmonton . 46 Clear Seattle | 50 Portland | 58 San Francisco 54 . *—Less than 10 miles. NOTE.—Observations at Alaska ma.lnland station, except Cordova and Juneau made at 8 a, m. and 8 p. m.) Juneau time. OGS A Y U5 2 < el The. pressure is moderately low - over Alaska but continues to rise slowly except at Cordova where it has fallen shortly. It is low- | high from the Pacific States to the Hawaiian Islands. Showers have fallen at Nome and Eagle and from the Gulf of Alaska to Oregon. The weather has cleared at Bethel and Nome and in part of the Gulf of Alaska. Temperature changes have been unimportant. annals of college rowing. Competition has never been so hot as it promises to be for the 32nd renewal of the great Pough- keepsie battle of blades, but it has any one college from monopolizing 3 1 |all three races. Not once since the . i three-mile junior varsity pull was added to the four-mile varsity and |two-mile freshman races in 1916 Habit of Vlclmy May Prove ??;zuile’y s el wal Hard for Other Inter- [three, 1in sweeping the river back in the collegate Rowers oared race. By TED VOSBURGH It is likewise true that rarely (Associated Press Sports Writer) |if ever has a college fleet come up NEW YORK, June 14—Never in to Poughkeepsie with a record to! the history of the intercollegiate match that of the current Colum- rowing regatta has any college bia Armada whose varsity h"nbeat- themgelves among the favorites for| every race with a chance to turn the trick. Victorious wherever they have‘ BEER AND WHISKEY HIT BY IRISH TAX| DUBLIN, June 14—The manu- for the season’s big event June 24 facture of beer and spirits, once a with a broomstick lashed to the huge industry in Ireland, has mast as a symbol of clean sweeps:shrunk amazingly since the war. in four regettas. Whether it will] Twenty-five distilleries were mak- still be there when the three gréat ing Irish whiskey ten years ago. races are over depends upon the|Now there are only five. Breweries strength of the varsity crews of have dwindled fi 19 to 14. California and Cornell, the “Jay-| Taation, remalning at its high- vees” of the Navy and Washington est war figure, has increased five- and the freshmen of Cflll!omln,i[old the cost of “a drink” and con- Cornell and Syracuse as well as samption has fallen sharply in perhaps one or two other boatlands, consequence. which are not so’ highly regarded.| The traffic in illicit whiskey— In two three-cornered regattas «poteen’—has also cut into the and two dual meets, all with worthy trade deeply, despite drastic penal- ;fiabfi?edcfrabiyflr!:;fepfm ties. All told whiskey production ctor; ch pr 5 to be hard to bieak. The M_,;zsce df;;:ased by 300,000 barrels ing manner in which the low- o swinging oarsmen rowing the old- ! time navy stroke, taught by | son of “Old Dick” Glendon, have rowed away from the Navy, Yale, — Princeton, Pennsylvania twice and Twe baskets for 25 cents. Massachusetts Tech forms one of ,shipment Green Vegetables the most nmuzflng chapters in the' morrow’s hont STRAWBERRIES PIGGLY WIGGLY in this Bethel 42 52 Clear i Dutch Harbor .. | 44 Cldy | est south of the Alaska Peninsula and in Alberta and is moderately | always been a bit too keen to keep: although Cornell succeeded swept three eight-oared events at en six rival shells and its J‘lyvcc\? | Péughkeepsie, but Columbia’s all- and freshmen five apiece without a | |conquering oarsmen this year find single set-back. -.ooo--c.o.oo. . SCIENCE NOTES L4 . 00000 vescoses + Artificial musks, that sell as high as $275 per ounce, are being manu- factured in the chemists’ labora- tories. Nature has kept a sort of weath- er record on deposits of fine-grain- ed clays, geologists have discovered, so that it is possible to estimate what temperature and. other con- ditions were when the cavemen 'hunted reindeer in Europe. Photographing the invisible is the |interesting task of investigators at the Pittsburgh experiment station of the Bureau of Mines, where re- search is in progress with a view |to producing safer explosives for luse in mines. Recently, the use of ethylene gas in ripening fruits has been de- ‘veloped to a high degree of suc- so that the process may be |applied with little difficulty, with certain results and at a small cost. The equipment, besides the room |itself, can be obtained for $230, or carload can bhe purchased in a |cylinder from supply houses for| fty cents. | POMP AND CIRCUMSTANCE TO LIVE AGAIN IN TEXAS | AUSTIN, Tex., June 14.—The gov- 35 years ago, is to be revived. Dan Moody, 35-year-old gover- nor, has given his consent to a new guard of reserve army officers to accompany him on occasions of state. accompanied by mounted guards, resplendent in gold braid and im- maculate trappings. More con- |servnmh executives in recent years | |have frowned on this practice. e lU. s. DISTRICT COURT I | The U. 8. District Court was ad- | journed until next Monday morn- |ing at 11 okclock, by Judge J. W.! ,Hardmg this morning. ————— { LET Amquist #ress ¥our Suit We call and deliver. Phone 526. - eee ! Try a TOASTET: SANDWICH &t the Juneau Ice Cream Parlors. adv - e Try the Tive 0'Clock Dinner Speclals at Mnbr7" —adv B less, and gas enough to ripen a| |ernor's guard, an object of display | Years ago Texas governors were' | ADJOURNED UNTIL MONDAY“ days when the j. v. was a four-| TEN ENTRANTS LEAVE OLYMPIA IN YACHT RACE Capital to_C.api!al Race Envolls Ten Yachts of Pacific' Coast Clubs Ten yachts representing clubs from Juneau to San Francisco will leave Olympia tomorrow and Sun- day on the 1000 mile race from Olympia te Juneau in the seecond Capital to Capital Yacht Race. Only three: of the ten were entrants in last year’s race, the other seven being new and most if not all of them making their first Alaskan voyage. The Race Pool will remain open ,until noon next Thursday it was | announced today by Dr. H.C. De- Vighne, Commodore of the Juneau | Yacht Club. Guesses as to the time of arrival of the first hoat can be made up to that hour. On Sale Locally Pool tickets are on sale at many local places, and are being sold at “Olympm also. Theoretically all ‘u. the entrants are due to arrive in this port at noon of June 21, having been handicapped on that | basis. Entrants in the race as an- nounced today are: Maide, Capt. Jack Power; Klosh, Capt. William Reed; Jazz, Capt. Cash Cole; Kit- tiwake, Capt. Walter Draham; Ko- yoia, Capt. George Driffit; Wini- fred, Capt. Adolph Schmidt; Bo- linder, @ant. Richard Froboese; Blonde, Capt. Milton Henderson; !Mary Mar-Ann, Capt. Frank Seid- elhuber, and Marlin, Capt. Henry 'I‘hulling Extends Congratulations | The local Yacht Club last night (wired the Olympic Race Committee as follows: “Please extend to Captains and jcrews in Capital to Capital Race \nur congratulations upon their en- J.ry in this great event, also, our sincerc best wishes for a pleasant jise. Juneau awzits their ar- nval with great pleasure and will ‘(-ndoz\vor to make their visit pleas- ’nnt Tell Capt. Cole of Jazz that \Junc’xu expects him to bring home |the bacon.” i R We make ana awer all kinds of lrur garments. Goldstein's Em- mrlum —adv. END TABLES siam— Smart end tables in, black and green, and red ' finish, wrought iron legs.. Amnniver- sary Sale Price— $1.95 /E)lge r-Flavor is seale

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