The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 20, 1929, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNE: 20, 1929. N/ Weather Condmons As Recorded hy the U.s. Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. (mla‘y: Fair tonight and Friday; warmer Friday; light variable winds. Honor Man‘ { A Country-wide Sale for Children 2 to_6 years N PLAY SUILNT S xocAL DATA . ; B fi\ Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity \Weather ] il / for all-day strenuous outdoor play 4 p. m. yesty 3017 49 9% s 6 Rain The ! A e e 4 a. m. today ...3018 46 98 s 3 Rain R T Sturdily made of color-fast, rugged blue Chambray, jauntily s sy s b o . p idy trimmed in gay red and big pearl buttons. Lsp(‘flnlly 2 ‘ : -3 appreciated by mothers because they launder easily, CABLE AND RADIO REFORTS F' st | YESTERDAY TODAY X irst: | 2 Pouble stitched at strain 3 Highest 4pm. | Low 4am. 4am. Precip dam . j ] Stations— lemp lemp. | _emp. temp. veloclty 24 eathe v | 1 Very full sizes ocim et i . £ points « ~ sVery Barrow C R TR B e T ) Clds atlonal 1 A { 1’) PRI e 60 50 | 28 50 12 0 Pt Cldy B A Bethel .. 60 58 | 42 a4 14 0 Cldy These Fort Yukon .6 64 | 50 60 — 0 Clear - 1 v ¢ Tanana 64 60 | 4 56 = 10 Pt. Cldy an 8l } | Unusual Values ~ Eagle 0 G e 0 Cldy L il - ? 3 N st. Paul . 4 4 38 38 0 0 Cldy g S S R Dutch Harbor ... 48 48 L s e Clear ! ;’m. :ufiy-l:.; «g mcrrhnn“l:,n:\: 2 Kodiak 54 52 4 46 0 0 Pt. Cldy (1) { rshall Fie smpany, Whole- = | aale, known as the COMBINATION i E:::;llfl - i: iz :: :f,- ; -i: ::t:‘s: j e PLx:::‘.l r:‘r::‘::ll‘i'v‘t:r' 2 Ketchikan 4 - | 50 — 6 .03 Showers Ju'leau bk ition [ Prince Rupert 60 54 | 44 48 0 .04 Pt Cldy Edmonton 70 64 | 4 46 10 0 Clear o Seattle . 64 62 | 52 82 . 0 Cldy Portland 68 68 56 56 % 0 Cldy : R Associated Press Ploto | San Francisco 8¢ 12 6z 62 0 0 Clear John B. Webster of San Dicrn, Less than 10 miles. 1 < 2al, fs “hinor man of the 147 : e graduating clacs at Annapolis, NOTE.—Observations at Alaska mainland stations, except Cor- dova and Juneau are. made at 8 am. and 8 pm., Juneau time. Deputies and i:zniy seized a car The pressure is moderately low south of the Gulf of Alaska and sk this Our Fur Manufacturing Depart- and 17 sacks of whiskey and ar-| in Central Canada and is moderately high throughout Alaska ex- ‘tn’“ the G:‘Szg;:a:v::;? ‘;é: EC:‘ment is in charge of an expert rested Oscar Casperson, The Mar-| cept in the upper Yukon Valley where it is about normal. It is also|® "”“""’_‘d" : i | furrier. Goldmein's Emporium. adv -, shal's office raided a storeroom| moderately high along the coast t> Oregon and thence southeast- UOSHR S, i gy | — e rented to Earl A. Byers, seized 50| ward. Rain has fallen from Cordova to Prince Rupert and in por- 155 it | Dell k. baerifl, Juneau's plano Phone 573, Temperature changes have been slight.| pAyING REACHES CITY DOCK |tuner and rebuilder. The paving or Front Street, which | ™ is being done in two sections so that the street can be kept open, reached the City Dock today. The work is being rushed with all pos- sible speed, by G. E. Krause, who was awarded the contract for the bottle of whiskey and arrested Ce-| tions of the Yukon Valley. cil McLellan. No hearing has been held in the Casperson and McLel- lan cases. NOMINATION OF home due here on the Alameda Saturday after a successful year at colleges, for their first term of higher education. The former at- tended Whitman college at Walla Walla, and the latter went to the DOUGLAS in SASH, DOORS & Millwork, can be had at Lakewood, N. J., Assaciated Press Phote where he is training The battling Basque training quaricrs at Hoosick Falls, N. Ye | Washington, wde a trip to Alaska |and Admiral Rodman, are now on their way to the National Zoo in D. C, Skipper Dykeman. FEDERAL GFFICERS SEIZE MUCH LIQUOR . IN KETCHIKAN RAID Four arrests were made and large quantity of liquor seized by Federal Deputy Marshals and Pro- hibition Agents at Ketchikan 'in raids made during the past two |days, according to telegraphic ad- vices received today by Marshal Albert White. Deputies Caswell and Sullivan and Prohibition Agent [ B. M. Behrends Co., Inc ® : ehrends Co,, Inc: MERCHANTS I ¥ v New York, Junc 27. \t a5 he appearsd at his KEECH CROSSES LINE FlRST IN AUTO ClASSlC Averag:rq 97.585 miles per hour, Ray Keech of Philadelphia won ¢he 500-mile annual race at Indi He is shown at finish. (Picture by telephato from Chicago}. 5 ago, when he made pt to climb Mt. Fair-| With a party from the East on | will make anotuer attempt i board, the 86-foot yacht, West- from Lituya Bay, taking i ward, Capt. Roe Dykeman, arrived | Andy or as gui The West- ¥ fn Juneau yesterday afternoon and | ward will go to Lituy | 1 will remain until after the first of | it leaves Juneau tom AR the Capital-to-Capital yacht racers there for about two weeks | i: é arrive tomorrow. Dr. Ladd attempts the dif- | $ The Westward is making its sec- | ficult ascent of Mt. Fairweather. ond trip to Southeast Alaska this| From there the boat will double % jeason. It returned to Seattle with | sack, returning to Seattlc by way " a party early in June, and met the | »f Sitka, Ketchikan, and Prince that now has it chartered, in | Rupert. It is due in Seattle July L Rupert. . Those making the | 28. grip are: Dr. W. 5. Ladd and Mrs.| Trout fishing has been enjoyed | 1/ Ladd, of New York, with their two | 5y the party in the various lakes| |§ " ehildren, Billy and Francis Ladd. | ind streams during their leisurely fi'lMHnEAPnrk of e, Md, with their two r Rgnq,,.ndsfluy mlllmunta!ncumber rip north. The two brown bear cubs, caught 7 the party on the Westward ear- | ier in the season, Lady Baranoflmer to the Federal Grand Juryi | Handy made the raids. Handy seized a car and two bot- tles of whis'cey and arrested George |A. Carlson who has been bound according to HART UNACTED ON BY SENATE Senate Recesses Without! Acting on His Nomina- tion for Nome Post When the Senate adjourned in| sumimer recess yesterday, the nom- {ination of J. H. Hart of this cityi for 'United States District Attorney | at Nome was unconfirmed, accord- | ing 'to 'an Associated Press dis-| patch‘to The Empire.. It was one| of ‘three nominations made by Pres- ident Hoover on which no action was taken. These nominations, therefore, lapse; Under the Senate rules all| nominations not acted upon before it ‘takes a recess are returned to the President. 'There .was 'some speculation whether President Hoov- er, ‘under the regulations, will be permitted to'give:a recess appoint- ment to Mr. ‘Hart and the two others upon whose nominations no action was taken should he desire to do' so.' No reason was given for the failure to act on the Hart appointment. Want Liberty in All Villages of France PARIS, June 20.—A public library in every town oi France is the cry of a committee of intellectuals, who argue that this country “should follow the example set by the Unit- 2d States.” The committee’s first move was to ask Parliament to pass a law calling upon every town of 10,000 inhabitants to construct a library building. ! Chapter No. 2, O. E. 8., for mem- i Lodge No. 124 F. & A. M. and their | NEWS PICNIC ARRANGEMENTS ANNOUNCED BY STARS With prospects of favorable weather next Sunday, preparations for the annual picnic of Nugget bers of that lodge and Gastineaux families to be held Sunday, June 23, are progressing satisfactorily. Practically everything except the particular boat to carry the picnic- ers out has been settled. However, a boat is to leave Ju- neau at 9 o'clock in the morning, | calling at Douglas and then pro- ceeding to Marmion Island where | i |the pienic grounds are located. | Those going are to provide thm\ own lunches. Ice-cream will be fur-| nished by the Stars. The return | home will be made early in the| cvcnfng. it PSSR EY | FORMER RESIDENT DIES Norman Henderson, who resided in Douglas with his wife and fam- ily for several years prior to the cave-in, passed away at Ahtanum, Eastern Washington, on June 8, ac- cording to word received here in the last ‘mail. Death was due to cancer. The deceased was a son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Wynkoop, who also lived here at the same time. He is survived by his wife, three sons, a daughter, one sister, one brother, and two grand child- ren. - — STUDENTS COMING HOME Waltcr Savikko and Ross Fox are | two Douglas young men enroute | Success Business College i tle. |con for Port Althorp to pick up| ! August Buschmann, Jin Seat- e FIRE MEETING TONIGHT Regular meeting of the Douglas Fire Department occurs tonight at 8 o'clock in the City Hall At- AP R JUNEAU LEAVING FOR SEATTLE TOMORROW | Taking a party of four to Annex Creek and return, the Alaska- Washington Airwa, plane Juneau Pilot Anscel Eckmann, took OH | this morning at 11 oclock and rv {turned at noon, in time for |Eckmann to attend the Ch,\mb‘ of Commerce luncheon. Tho:cw | making the trip were Miss Rae Stevens, Miss Eva Tripp, Emil Gas- | tonguay, and J. P. Van Orsdale. ‘The plane left soon after lunch- cannery man, | and G. H. Skinner, President of the Alaska Pacific Salmon Corporation for a two hour tour of their can-| neries in this vicinity. The Juneau will leave for Se- attle, by way of Ketchikan, and Craig, tomorrow morning at five | o'clock. Anyone wishing mail tn: go south with the plane can leave | NO MORE CORNS | OR CALLOUSES Hard or Soft Corns, Corns between the toes or on the top or bottom of the feet now TR instantly. END-0-CORN takes them all off every time—no pain, no fuss, just apply at night ort next, morning but if ¥ too far away writer END-O-CORN LAB. ORATORIES, 4 Garfield Blvd., Chicago who will see that you receive a ja Butler-Mauro Drug Co. “France has a few public libraries and those she possesses are in a sad state,” Louis Thomas, the sec- retary of the eommittee writes. | “The French read less than '.he‘i Scotch, the Germans, the English and even the Americans.” Mr. Thomas neglects to explain his reason for prefixing Americans with “even.” - SCIENTIFIC: REACTION SEEN IN GASPS OF AWE WASHINGTON, June 20. — Is there a psychological study of im- portance in the gasp of awe with which humankind greets the sight of the grand canyon of the Colo- rado? That question has been pro- pounded to the American Council of Education by John C. Merriman, President of the Carnegie Institu- tion. He advances the theory that the National Parks and all great nat- ural spectacles offer an opportunity for the 'psychologists to analyze that hitherto indefinable mental state known as “inspiration.” Plan American College With Site in Hamburg HAMBURG, June 20—A cam- paign has been :aunched for the establishment of a German-Ameri- can collegé under the leadership of Dr. Albrecht Mendelssohn-Barthol- y. An initial contribution of $20,000 from America has been assured for the project, as well as an annual subsidy of ‘$2,500. The muitunun would be a Euro- pean center for the study of soci- ology, economics and laws of the United States. Both European and ‘American students would be admitted. ————,— PLUMBING Juneau, Antwerp, Holland, imported 400,- 000 barrels of apples this season as against 10,000 barrels in 1927-28. WE SELL “CRANE” AND “STANDARD” Plumliing Fixtures “BIRCHFIELD” AND American Radiator Co. Heating Boilers HART and RAY Oil Burners RICE & AHLERS CO. HEATING “We tell you in advance what job ‘;m cost” SHEET METAL Alaska paving. —shop or city—Call Handy Andy. Phone 498. | Empire. J tendance of all members importan.t | = | Distributors at low cost direct from Dol the manu- For Carpenver Work of any kind factarer., Write for complete il lustratedcar- alog FREE. N\ FILY CORPN Commercial Job printing at The = STUDEBAKER. worlds largest builder of Eights offers championship performance at One-Profit prices in The C’amm&mdefl? 1ot Commanpes Eiont Convextiace CassioLe, $1645. Six wire wheels and srunk rack standard equipment. Commanvrx Eicut Courr, $7495. Prices at factory. Bumpers and spare tires extra. \ODAY’S Commander Straight Eight has swept toa pop- ularity eclipsing even that of its predecessor, the gallant Commander which sped 25,000 miles in 22,968 minutes. Studebaker, holder of every official speed and endurance record for stock cars, now: sells more 8-cylinder cars than any other manufacturer. The Commander Eight blends style and speed with com- fort unknown until Studebaker introduced ball bearing spring suspension. And its One-Profit price is quite as remarkable as its champion performance. JUNEAU MOTORS, INC. Juncau, A].nska Select Baby’s Carriage : NOW ! T will pay you to select baby’s carriage now—while 4 our stock is complete. In our wide variety of styles and colors you will be sure to find just the proper_carriage, sulky oc stroller for baby. All are nuomblypdeedn&atevuymhum-flordone.

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