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poli ticlans and ent eeds in introducing features and since. He was @ mariner by occu-~ and investigate. He found Mrs, (0ld First National Bank Building) o ————————-—" LTI | AW T 7 4 = » ke 2 o BRI . - S A v & 2 . -4 l V f S(’[l it . S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU B enerable Bishop o le he Wesil ‘ -INVENTORY | he I g 1 : PRE-I] / ' chese Dles Christmas Nig ig Cochipalts [ By the U. S. Weather Dureau) | seaTTLE, Dec. Sec. 27, — W“h_ a Forecast for Juneau and vicinity. beginning =i ¢ pm, Dee. 273 priestly benediction on his 1lips, Probably snow and colder toaight, Wednesday evening clearing ¢ {death of Christmas night, ended and colder; moderate easterly win { ) {the long career of the M;);t Rev- | Time Barometer Temp. Hum'lity Wind Veiocity Wl:athe‘ 3 j€rend John O'Dea, aged years, | 4 pm. yest'y 20.5 38 SE 8 ain L | Bishop of the Catholic diocese of | ain. today 2 34 w 7 Mist | o 2 Seattle. | on today 20.88 35 3 s 5 Mist § hn F His church work spanned half ! “ E mportance to 5 An Event Ofl o ce {a ecentury in the 'Pacific North-! | . | 3 | ' - e . ! Ever /. | WE. ¢ | TODAY i Every Woman Who Needs |"B hbdsstoins 8 bl ; YESTRRDAY | _ TC T % a.N Co | ODeaapbeated risfly St the Gol- | Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. dam. Precip. 4am. a.New Loat |den Jubilee of his ordination. Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity Zflgrs V;ua(tjl;v:; ‘ Cancer of the intestines, compli- | Barrow -18 -22 -24 t cated with peritonitis, caused his | Nome 10 8 -2 4 0 pLscm,v { A S | death. Bethel 6 4 6 10 12 n One needs only tosee these ] death. i 5 e £ ol 2 Gt | : S ] lendidly styled coats to || s 44 Tanan 28 28 36 -3 0 0 Clear \ i o B jinform. His faith in featurss and anana | 3 § X / - ; 1 Patihank -2 <36 -3 0 0 Clear 3 smics neyver waned and much of | Fairbanks -18 22 36 34 4 { i 45 realize’ FHAY "thiey wers (1 o s Sl b Ol Sl o 0 ouar | I Yyou ask HIM— about ‘ made to sell at much high- ]|attributed to his foresight of the TSHOP ODE 0w | 3 38 3 Trace rv.-ni a ] o REGEN v . | value of comics ps and eeriAlf el o FT . oo 38 38 e 2 zd pier 3 €r prices. The beautlful and short stories. 36 34 :_ 34 0 i ‘;m;.v 1 . . From the time of nis originial 34 34 .5,) 28 0 2 ~w;‘ | fabrics — the lallormg T | endorsement of Grover Cleveland 39 38 a2 7 £4 S 2:1:; | ’;,- R the smart models anid fine [{%x e presdemer. st Maek 7 W @ | % om 4. m o Fl ]RNACE COAL ; the smart models an promiriente in Democratic polities A f) Ketchikan 0 40 W st feiad } Liv M nes ari W steadily. As ‘delegate o the " b Prince Rupert 38 38 36 3 i 4 F | 5 iur trunmings are features gre 4 4 16 4 0 Clear | Democratic National Convention at Edmenton 32 14 1 ] | He will tell you that — o that make every coat an | Cnicago in 1892, e was made a 52 46 42 46 24 Trace Cldy ; nat mass Y miember of ‘the committee that of- : 54, 48 S L g s o what coal you burn; ALWAYS bank Y 4 1 ~ L = . « coal you burn, {~ exceptional bargam value. ficially notifiéd Mr. Cleveland of ~’ 50 50 40 40 6 0 POy matter wha y 5 4 2 { his nomination. He was a d‘eleg;:&e 4 T low in Southern low- your fire with CARBONADO furnace coal. j No woman who has been ‘f;""m:: She paLpal. Soniaal Ydfing Woman Claxms Wd~ Aleutian Islands and south of the Gu]ff of OAmm Carbonado holds the fire, and | S 474 wi h rain or snow in the Aleu and from the Gulf to Oregon. 3 : : wanting a nejy T !th:"“De’ Mmacku?at;sua aTecOmmmmxtf Kldnaped Near Clt.y Hall The pressure is moderately high the Interior with generally clear | holds down your fuel bill INDIAN LUMP i ih{lr()l’d to OVCl‘IOOk these bes mnch CY ako!r;r a quarter Blrly Last ngh[ ather in that di ct and in Northwestern Temperature i 4.50 ¥ J A, New. Yorl fuariar | i hanges have been slight in all pos 1 Carbonado has as much fuel = $14.5 per ton ¢ “ . FIngs of a century. He was chairman & [ X OMCTIRgS: from'1908 to 1912 and directed the| (Gonunuea 1 rage Gae) value as many lump coals 3 . {last campaign of Willlam Jernings | — e 33 r CARBONADO % | Bryan who' selectéd him for the post not know who called her, but s! costing_ geveral dollars more $16.00 t s in recognition of the fact that the | was told to come to the €l » 3 per ton . | Buffalo editor was the “originl!Apartments for something of, jm- per ton. And remember—for Bryan man” in New York State. |portance. full heating satisfaction with i f ‘ Conventien Head She said she had lost her pur b:k COMBINATION | He was in charge of the natipnal Sunday evening and thought a money-back guarantee, start %15. on 5 | convention in Baltimore in 1912 might b: in connection with . 3 $15.25 per;t ! ° Juneau’s Leading Department Store | which nominated Woodrow Wilson She asked Lasarde what he thou your fire with INDIAN coal, i |after @ historic battle with the about it and he told her it was i Prices quoted | \ i | late Champ Clark of Missouri. gl il % go ahead. HBiuc- and bank with CARBONADO. cad ‘l]l | | Twice Mr. Mack declined the nom- | jed her as far as the post 4 X wnctude delwvery & hi & e | | compan 2 s ' ‘3 him. Young Mack was dazzled and | jnation for United ‘States Bemator| office, then went back downtow Buy the “Barguin Heating it "’g ] charmed with Z‘f ;‘;"33:13:~““'<.\nd in both instances Democrats Slugged from Car coals NOW — gt these LOW 412 9, B $0,Fditor, JORNSE, were elected. Mrs. Thompson, who is an at- rices. Phone k: years later while speak-| one of the characteristics of Mr.! 4 - o o, P b f the ineids Mr. Mack said: | tractive brunettz, about 25 yea T as satimated with the doter. | Mack was his ability to remember| g “caiq sne left the Capitol Build- 4 y il Gl d..!c:—,[ac” any names, He never failad: ing and walked along Fourth Stréet »4 A ’:n l(;wnxapn \\’:Z\l?n;sél;\m salute his friends by their nrsflpast the City Hall toward the en- U wspaper when T was 21| oo Ifrance to the Oliff Apartments. ) ; .3”)d Y & 3 | During his newspaper oareer he. gp. poticed an automobile ap- b his initial appearance| e'nwmgm:hu; 0‘:111[\;1 03;1::,?.{0?;;- proaching from the rear, moving Former Publ r alisio tield in TWB| , slowly, and paid no attention to it. 23 el Y ‘ v nors, Sr., & rival Buffalo publisher. The machine veered, drove along- ! fid Democratic Lead when he founded the Cflfl“h‘“qufl |In later years their differences were = A . ul Democratic Lead Lake Gazette at Jamestown, N.|patched up and & strong bond of Sld¢ her, and a big man with a 2 d ies in E i e lo the lower part e i Dies in East 1879 1‘;' w;l his ho‘dmg"fnrndsh\p grew between them. :}B';fis ;;;eh movfifst Beiow ‘tha e‘;,e,,. o i | ember of that year es-| wMr Mack was christened Mc- 3 & % al 4 5 o r and struck her S LA e recelving a credit of‘w“ ditficult for acquaintances and p fell, he grdsped her dna; r;ulled i i | business associates to remember. B i 0 YOUR M | | e e car. In \ 1“, 1883 Mr. Mack established the | pveryhody called him “Mack”; he 1167 Into the back of th (s Hagd n oney . . | B““}»Nt Evening I“;“‘d “b“d ‘”A;‘l‘ | was labelled that in baby hood and Jns Zm\ by g i {8 e o1 o & chort time ago had been the it clung to him through his school 7 R T . : i active published and editor of bot h;qqy\ when he grew to manhosd, | LN¢ Man then attempted to stib : Wlth ) newspapers. | Thus, he officially bec: N her, cutting through a light rabbit- Four of the western governors who attended a mceting in Sait Switching from an independent > =/ ame NOTMAN i coat and penetrating to her Lake City were (top, left to right) A. M. Clark of Wyoming, Fred | ] eV E. Mack. 4 of the knife Baizar of Nevada, C. B. Ross of Idaho and George H. Dern of Utah. | 4 torial poliey, the Times en- A S L Aonal UG VORI R s Of th lutions ittee which met after the aret \ dorsed Grover Cleveland for the| was bent and therblade fifoke ‘oft < Belew are membere of the fesolitions commiBeiaRTl right: Dr. A, G % candidacy in 1884. This mowln E A TH TAKES {about one-third of the way down. geS e BGEREANLECD ML S R AL Smith, Omaha; A. M. proved the turning point in Mr, The only wound resulting was's. Barton, manager of the California reclamation board; G. W. Grebe, | >, Mack’s newspaper enterprise and| seratch to which' the broken part (una, ida., John R. Lovelace, Bozeman, Mont., Joseph Jacobs, Seattle, T_floeolol(;‘sgledr i; Pré{;):dflfsst:l: L] eventually led to his entrance into| of the blade adhered. Wash., and W. G. Ide, Portland, Ore. (Associated Press Photos) 5 E Goes to Conventions { e sald she was dazed but nol .o por jnto the machine and rush- pdssible dangsr today, although the, Elected several times delegate to o 3 unconscious and was aware of what o4 .o to the hespital. broken rils are causing her con- | THE ASSEMBLY COMPANY National Democratic conventions, | Hls HBME HERE was transpiring. -The driver of the ~ p,r gevera) hours, while she was siderable pain. | = 1 he became a member of the state | I car, which she described as a “big, ,hoonseious and then semi-con- e o B 1 Secured By E and national committees of his| s black car” told her assailant he .o npo Thompson's identity - ¥ i party and chairman of the national | had bungled the job amd said, in oo inoun 1 w’:ns Sevén hontk o :3,‘,:?:0:!:2" LICENSE | THE ASSEMBLY APARTMENT K committee. In 1908 he: held the [Funeral, Under Direction ettect: after she . veachad . the. hospital e~ | BUILDING 3 cha 'xnu.nslxx}) of both committees of Moose WIH Be Hcld ! “Let's take her and throw hr for: she had recovered sufficiently, oity licende has been reduced to' 3 g 1 besides being a member of the na- % 4 into Gold Creek to finish the job.” ;. give her name and an account. gs0p Ake by the City Comnoll 3 4 tional committee, a triple honor Fnday Afternoon | The car then sped to the Gold c wrot hog heppened to her. She! ang wfi'Ju e puayble.lzml- in Juneau 2! Ve el e ! it 2 t 3 . . . . . fore bestowed upan a mem- |Creek bridge where the door WaS g ner story to officers at 3 a.m, 1, 1933, along with the Terri- Is Now Being Offered in Denominations or - b ary ong {ber of the party at one time. G- A. Nelson, aged 58 years, died Opened as it approached the striC- gnq they have been investigating| torial license. No City license plate of $500 each ! On December 22, 1891, Mr. Mack | yesterday at his home on Ninth ture and she was hurled out. She tinoe ‘that ‘hour. 1;"“ o but former City N- | . P s mazried Harriet B. Taggart of Buf-|Strcet of pulmonary trouble. His Temembered nothing further until Sl m”"‘“mbfl'l roiibe Description Folder Sent on Request. 4 NORMAN E. MACK Mfll( They had two daughters,|ailment had been of long stand- she was restored to consciousness 1s a Neweomer R g;::l’mD Bonds May Be Reserved by Making 4 - Philip Metz and Mrs. Stuart|ing, | about 3 o'clock this morning in the Mrs. Thompscn has lived here a ged City Cl B 57 Deposlt p was ‘one of his b | Both sons-in-law were as-| Mr. Nelson first came to this hospital. /since early last summer. Her hus-| —24%: SFR i £ Tis ; to Wheeling, W. Vi d with Mr. Mack in the|Territory in 1899. After remaining | Bathe Finds Woman band, Leo Thompson, a plumber CALL OR PHONE 1 came impresse ith the i tion of the Times for sever-la few years, spending most of the! Mr. Bathe, who discovered her, by trade, was employed until last EAS";EEN ST‘:B : i ance of be! and pub- al yea; time in Juneay, he returned to the said he was going home and when October by Rice and Ahlers Com-| Stated meeting for Order East- | F I lisher. Boliever in Comics States. He came back to Juneau he was across th2 bridge he heard pany. The couple are known to ern Star, Tuesday, December 27. l THE ASSEMBLY CO. OFFIC Each ¢ n lobby | Mr. Mack was one of the plon-|in 1912 and had lived here over a sound that caused him to hat have had domestic difficulties and 8 p. m. —adv. | men of the town g ‘Willlam H. Johns ‘Wheeling Registe; around comics > 'He believed that a daily newspa. per should entertain Pardoned by President Hoover in near Fort Smith, Ark., while enroute to into the mnewspaper field. as well as pation. -| Mr. Nelson is survived by Mrs. Ndson. the widow, two sons, Ver- son of Juneau and two sisters, Miss Minnie Nelson of Alameda, Cal, and Mrs. Christine Lingren of San Franciseo. 2 o'clock Friday afternoon at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, The the ritual of the Loyal Order of | Moose, of wi Mr. Nelson was a member. Evergreen cemetery. PREFR /1 1 2 SON IS BORN TO was born shertly after 8 o'clock The infant weighs seven and a half the attending physician. Mr. Pegues is Managing Editor of The Alaska Empire. MR. AND MRS. OLAFSON Rev. Erling K, Qlalson, pastor of the Resurrection Lutheran Church, and Mrs. Olafson, at their home in the Lutheran parsonage, Third and Main Streets tomorrow after- non G. Nelson gnd Arthur W, Nel- | Funeral exercises will be held at . services will be:m accordance with | nterment will be in/ i MRS. JOHN E. PEGUES! — | To Mre. John E. Peguss; a son' last night at St. Ann’'s Hospital.! pounds, Dr. H. C. DeVighne was l TO HOLD OPEN HOUSE Thompsen lying alongside the road- way with her ‘head under bridge floor. She was moaning As he started to the nearsst house to telephone for aid, he saw Baldwin's car approaching. He stopped it and with Blldwin's heln the separated several weeks ago, and Thompson left for the south. He is now reported to be in Seattle. | She has worked at several local| establishments, and last night she said she has been employed re-| cently at the Pantorium Cleaners.’ She was considered out of anv | 1 { Back from Job in France EAT AND BE FIT' There's an easy way. Re- duce your amount of rich, heavy food and eat half a lnullnlyo{ PEERLESS WHOLE-WHEAT BREAD It contains all the elements for rich nutrition and a daily cicansing of the body. Ask your grocer for Peer- less Bread. PEERLESS ‘BAKERY PHONE 28 A Local Investment Where You Can See Your Dollars Earn 7%. ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LiKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 89 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:39 - For Expert filfiu Mdlufln dnee 1898, when, as a convicted ma h-ndxt. he from 8 Venwo ‘ederal emunnnry William Kirby Robinson (left), is shown h.rl:h : the shadow was at last lifted from his life. Recently, ::. mm ence, l:unlex{xde':‘«:l hm‘uglf to v.h; authori. Kansas City. But the exemplary life he hae lod since his escape 4-”:;; to be forwarded to President Hoover, asking clemency, !bm the unconditional pardon he is shown receiving, noon will hold open house for members of the congregation and other friends of Mr. and Mrs. Olaf- - son. | The hours for calling will be between 2 and 5 o'clock. it fi 4 . ast slx‘ml;‘:;‘hg %‘& l’hgeedrvmnt the work of the Rattle Mon ommission, which'is €xXi soon. Vore ‘m trmfled";h:vt his “War Memo he Pulitzep Frises Loq::f trim and ma-erly as ever, Gehéral Jahn .| Pershi Vi General spen to be completed b beep