The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 30, 1927, Page 7

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U : A nnouncement v tare will he | open for bn tomorrow morn ing, Friday R y 1 We cor dially invite ev one to pay our| store a visit, often as possible ‘whether they 2 a purcha jor not. We you would get the habit Mr. Harry A. York ig in charge our Preseription Department. | Mr. York is a licensed Pharmacist {of long experience, having held very responsible positions with fsome of the leading drug store in the States. Another licensed Pharmacist will be here in a very short time York Our pres made | from the purest best Phar maceutical and Biological prod {ucts obtainable, and you can de- pend upen it, they will be made Iright H lot to riptior and have a Rubber Good complata n We v ply of pleased to tim makin om future show any w o con plate at purchase v | ¢ most com- | nd To ty” Ourl '8 is so great add space pro plete st let- Articles if |variety of the {that our limited {hibits mentioning = the brands {ncluded under this heading icomplete line of Shaving nece sities is a I | | | | | We tion, Eat have, without any excep- the most up to date and ctory ITee Ceam Soda Foun- tain in Alaska, at the present| itime, We say the most dtisf ffory because of the fact that it is equipped with a cooling system! that requires no ice and so that {Ice Cream and Refreshing Drinks fare maintained at proper tem- peratures without any variation, Dot Kay is in charge of the Fountain, having but a few| months ago arrived here from the States where she worked veral years for Liggett’s in cne of the largest soda fountains, We have both Seattle and ‘“Funeau Ice Cream, and will be glad to serve| the kind that is desired. We have both Schrafits and .Lowney's Chocolates in very at- tractive boxea. Our stock of Sla’lion;ry is well worth investigating. Many, fine numbers have arrived and morejAmerican Legion will go over- are coming. At our opening we are offering you a very fine ex- lclusive Novelty Box Stationery as special, in assorted numbers to «choose from, and the price for a few days is 60 cents per box. ! OPEN TdM(YRl’lOW, FRIDAY JULY 1. PHONE 33 ' HELLAN’S 'PHARMACY | he i Paul | ton, | exeept the streets and other pub- ‘peka, State Adjutant, THE BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNL 30, 1927. By BILLE DE BECK ASKA 0 BARNEY GOOGLE,WHoSE ONLY EXPERIENCE ON A FARM GOES BACK To TUE DANS WHEN HE SRENT WIS SUMMERS W\Tw HIS GRANDPA (8 CENTRAL ILLINOIS, VAN umw S T . ACRE ESTATE. \3 KGMND DISAPPOINTMENT = P.mszV “HOUGHT HE'D HAVE T4 GET LUP AT 5 AM. B Milk THE 2 CoOwsS, SPEND WIS DAYS LOOKING AFTER THE CROPS AMD TR CATTIE —=INSTEAD . EVERY - THING 'S DONE BY EXPERTS CR MACHINERY AND BARNRY m- LEFT To PLAY THE ROLE * e GeNlieman of (EASURE LONT \\l‘\“" e L M AT e U RE ?\.\’ I CR HANEN T GOT To DO AN T £R PEOPLE, < MLt CALLONARES v e N AL LAUNDRY KiDO S SUPERIOR ’ LAUNDRY _ OUR WERK 13 oF THE NIGHEST ERADE - - S50 WERE S0LOTING VYouR. TRADSG 0 santar tistactorily nd it back will win your ition. Rough dry Americor - _glin DOUGLAS |, NEWS |l Piw vice-command Roosevelt ‘ost of his cit he haen to pla wreath Lie oseyelt. Th wdo g on 1 K. Fre a s the post. A hoanti Memorial fountai insefbtion, “On! to live who do has b cte 4t Q half miles viater, e SURPLUS IS - $633,000,000 END OF YEAR [iscal Year Ending Tonight Finds Treasury Surplus l..'lrgmt in History. on, rated we ath will be by Capt. C. B commander of ful Roosevelt hearing the fit FOURTH OF JULY OFFICIALS ARE NAMED Is will b small e following offi chax of of the n er ramery, from ion July el it was the Fourth of next Monday last might: Announces. Cashen, Jr.; arter, W 3, coro; Judge the Finigh Jerry €ashen, Lundell @ Mike Pusicl master, L. W Kilburn n ports brtation d me and on rave of the nounc Thon of wrt the ich will b pre prav last the Detinit HNOITOW, - SHINGTON, HIKE (e | proximate 000,000, Tune tha will it ury ap §62 is in tary of Meilon's This las) at Wing Seer Andrew W $10,060,000 the largest treasury | the nistory of the end of a fiscal year. larg urplu it reached §505,000,000. Acting Secret of the ury Ogden L. said the opinion of Tr partment the gurplus applicd tan | public debt rathor direet reduction of B o | dieated, e= ) L“‘ N srtune, Mike | prolific rants in MINNEAPOLIS, June 30 ter three y of ill Kelley, once the most baseball pen seiation, is stag Treasury timate by in country the The previous in 1924 when of ican a comeback. When Mike managed Paul m he tuwmed out pions almost perennially turned down two major to, pilof the Mia- | in which he had interest Disastrous and Minneapolis b Mike had left his | dy in other | - [HELLAN STORE TO sl OPEN TOMORROW A4 | entry in has o Sivision | Tomorrow ola s |Meilan store .. | the miost attractive Bev having beon Rubn Plizon, in- | Al the latest and most | tablishments of the | States. |Kansas Town Calls ] The was the cham- | In 1924 len 3 Trea Mills that the Vi team acquired an days followed gan to think heralded w twin eity ut now team i3 a formi the association ra a high place in the first all season. Two of warriors - arve with the Minneapolis ontfit pitcher, and Bert fielder. to reduction than taxes of to Kelley" morning will the new be opon tore is one of of its kind in copiad f up-to-date kind in the S walls and ceiling fire-proof metal Halt on OII wellfi are painted beautifully blend ¢ [ with artificial light. The fixtures { Be- | are of drift wood gray finish ani cause it appeared probable This ars most attractivelly arranged town might have to move to|Tho soda fountain is probably tic make way for oil rigs, the City most up-to-date of its kind in tho Council has passed an ordinanee north, the gidaire System, limiting drilling to one well in which was installed by B. Chry- each' bleck. All property owners tiansen and Bill Johnston of the in the block shull receive a pro-| Gastinean Electic Company. vated royalty in the event of pro-| JI. A. York will be in charge dueticn, according to their hold- of the drug department and h ings in square feet. | has n a registered pharmage are in the finish to acd OXFORD, Kan., June 30. Soon af was found here fecr the past thirty years, having a feverish boom developed In|heen connected with the Warren town-lot oil leases, and virlu-lllv Drug Compan nd the Baker Drug every square inch of the eity,! company in Scattle for the | numbers of years, where he spe- | eialized in the m(nu ription denart- mont, Mrs. Dorothy Kay will be in i ¢charge of the fountain, She has (had congiderable experience in that lne, having been recently ir (charge of the fountains in the Liggett Drug Company in Port- land. Sha will be assistéd hy Miss { Rae Stevens. In connection with the fountain are three hooths and a room e=peciaily arranged for spo- cial parties, Both Seattle and Ju, neau-ice cream will be served. A complete, line of cosmetics, toilet articles, and sundries hove been installed by Mr. Hellan. A public telephone booth has been arranged in the rear of the slore A unique feature of the estab- lishment is the ladies’ rest room, probably the oaly one of jts kind in Alaska where the women can rost in lounging chairs.’ Several desks have been arranged where writing material can be found for correspondence. placed under! House was torn started in lic property, was The Oper down and an oil well the former basement. When plans developed to tear| down other buildings and to sink| numerous~ wells in front yards, the city stqmnml in and called af halt. i e el ALL SIX KANSAS PAST STATE COMMANDERS OF | LEGION GOING TO PARIS 30.—Six of the of The| TOPEKA, Kas.,, June past State Cominanders Department of Kansas seas for tha ninth anual conven- tion to Dbe held in Paris} Sept. 19 to 23, Ernmest A. Ryan, To- announeed today. The Sunflower State be- Heves that this 100 per cent rec- ord has not been reached by any other department. The Past Com- manders who will shove off for the Paris trip are Dr. W. A. Phares, Wichita; Thomas_ Lee, Topeka; Wilder 8. Metecalf, Law- rence; * Frank Haucke, Counecil Grove; Ralph O’Neil, Topeka, and J. B. Gaitskill, Girard. S eee ROOF FIRE AT NOON A small roof fire at noon today on the building in the rear of the W. E. B. barber Shop, was ex- tinguished in a few minutes hy the Fire Department. The fire is believed to have hoen started by sperks from an adjoining chimney but no damage was done, - TRIBUNE, WILL BE PAID TO QUENTIN ROOSEVELT BY AMERICAN LEGION OYSTER BAY, N. Y., June 30. —Tribute to First Lieutenant Quentin Roosevelt, son of the late President ThedMore Roosevelt, whose plane “was shot down ‘While cn observation duty for the 150th Look your best in a Hart Schaffner & Marx Suit for the “Fourth.” GOLDSTEIN'S EM- PORIUM. —adv. ——————— T MONEY WILL BE xt Pear paper mmv will ho Emaler, & SMALLER—-BUT & Ty \Icl]nn has approved the plan for smail ler bills. 7ill be 614 by 274 inehes; 1 ills will be the first to appeax in 3 by bills of larger deuomiuntion, yhick go up _to §10,000, ugx mruwim 1e old bills are 7716 by 3 > new What Deoes Future Hold for Marriage of Stillman Heir and E rckuw 4 By ELMER CLARK Tnternational rated News Staff Correspondent, LEAS VILLE N, Y. (I.I-N).—Will the latest Stillman matrimonial venture succeed ¢ A bold question, that, on the eve of the wed- ding of two young folks, so wrapped in each other’s love that t} exist in a world of dreams, and for whom life stretches on a -vulnlcn trail through a sunny Are; Nevertheless, it seems a fair f|!lr‘.’»|l(‘pn, even if the name of Stillman did not instantly sug- gest matrimonial discord, Consider: Bud Stillman, twenty-three, a cglleze man, brought up in the sophisticated luxury of the Stillman millions, Iis triends include those one wyieets at Princaton, chil- dren of rich or bourgoise familics, prattling sophisti- cates in a world of their own. Ilis tastes are highly cultivated, The process has been on since birth, He appreciates fine writings. He is about to get his B. S, from Princeton, In the Fall he is to enter the Fhysiclans’ and Surgeons’ College of Columbia Univer- sity, Lena Wilson, elghteen, a Canadian woods girl. She has been ed among a people where women must bear their share of hard work. Her friends have been the simple, good hearted folk of outlying Quebec. While f she has never sulfered from poverty, fine living is un- known ir. her homeland. Her tastes are simple. Her language is the Canadiap French, although she speaks English well. In faet, her English s more easily un- dérstood than her French would be to a Parisian, for the woods patios Is a dialect of its own, One might ask: How can these two be happy to- gether? After the first flush of love will not their § backgrounds, their inhibitions be pulling them in diver- gent directions? Will not Stillman’s bridge-playing friends find his bride first a curiosity, then a bore? Do not their different stations In life forcordain this match to be another Stillman tragedy? Perhaps, Too great may be the differences be. tween them in what most of us flatter ourselves 1o call culture. After a few years, I‘ud may find the higher pools of the social swirl alluring, His bride may be enchanted by memory's view of her old life in the forest. Peghaps. But consider again— Bud Stillman's view of moneycd romance is not too pleasing, His own father and mother, the James A. Stillmans, went through great unpleasantness, which might mot have happened if they were poor. Then, Lena will be constantly rcfreshing to him. She's a different sort of person. She'll clagsify with o one he meets in New York. She hasn't his educa~ tion, but she has his intelligence, and he'll probably find her mentally stimulating long after most wives will have become boresome. And Lena! For a scofe of years her life has been 1aid in the woods. Now she's entcring on a new life, abounding in new experiences and strange aspects, all centering around her husband-to-be. Her entire life will be so different from her earlier experiences that the ordinary dangers of boredom—which, after all, s the greatest single cause for marital unhappiness—will be far removed. Consider further, that )Miss Wilson comes of a race primitive in its ideals. Mnorriage is made for | life, The woman is the man’s propcrty, but woe unto the possessed who lets the possessor et awayl Unlons are more than marriage as some Stiimans understand it; they are the welding of lives, And so it would seem that it there is danger that | this match may fail, the danger sccr s to be more than \ balanced by the elements that will make it lasting, hile, preparations are Leng made for the ! wedding, tentatively set to start July 20, “Start” is | right, for the ceremony may take three days. It is to aristoeracy, Ilere is Anse, Que, tivities, Nel gratulate home here, in Europe. New Emden Honors Memory Of Old In honor of the old Emden an! officers .and members of its crew whose lives were lost when it w sunk off Keeling Island in M ember, 1614, memorial servic were held aboard the new cruis Emden when it visited the histori spot last March. At the conciu sion of the simple @sremony, tho, guns of ths mew cruiser thunder ed out a salute t6 the famous vessel for which it is mamed and the gallant German heroes who remains still rest in the shattored steel hull, ts, it was tecorded that ot “The Emden of the Great War 'n single life was destroyed swept commerce from the lanes of [the capture of encmy merchan the Indian Ocean for several vessels, and prisoners were hon- m Its exploits, muhd the 'orably and courteously treated. he havoe it wrought to hipping stirred England lew other sea problems arly days of the war. 2 kips and 20 merchant v s were caplured or sunk by fthe great. raider in its shortlived and highly eveniful career. enemy as did in the Under the command of Captala Millor, its spectscular raids gaiu [ed for the old Bmden a world wid renown, and it was populs known as the “scourge of the " Yet in all of its engage- mden in Service| | I { in @ seeved A 7 e woods Gii New blood for New York’s a fine study of Lena Wilson, Canadian woods girl who is to become the bride of Bud Stillman, heir to the James A. Stillman millions. (1IN Exclusive.) be held In the old French Canadlan faghlon at Grand Iirst comes the ceremony proper, (i hbors from miles arouna wifl be there to share the Stillman cheer, to buss the bride and con- the bridegroom, quaint folk songs from days before the revolution, and old time hospitality will mingle, The arrangements are being dirccted by Mrs. James A. Stillman and Miss Wilsun from the Stiliman Miss Wilson is here on her Lirst visit to the New York region, the Stillmans and Mise Wilson wii return to the Still- man home at Grand Anse, where Bud (irst met Lena. After the ceremony, Bud and his bride will travel Upon their return to the United States they will live in a six room house here that Mrs, Still. man is lending them until they can arrange for their own apartment In New York City. be convenient to Columbia, where Bud will resume his studles in the Fall, ) fes. Old fashioned dances, Shortly Leloce the ceremony The apartment will mem On den vis in Nov CGiorm wn' pride, the now 1e of the battle 1014, in which the raider was defeatod and sunk with heavy loss of life by the superior Australian cruiser Sydney. It was here that memorial services were held, In one of the corridors of the vessel now vis ing in this port, there is a roil on which is enscribed the names of those whose lives were lost in the last battle of the old Em den. people mber, e MARTHA SOCIETY IS GIVE NOONDAY LUNCHEON As the members of the Martha Bociety made all arrangements for the Juncheon tomorrow for the Chamber of ~Commerce, which has been cancelled, a lunch will be at tha usual time, ready at 12 o'clock rooms of the Alaska Light and Power Company. Ak ss s b ieh crerary of the ' These \\i” be foliow | denburg ter being.” | 4 | “Fourth.” and K noon in the Display Electri | PORIUM mall expense. You're lad to clothes that ire 80 washed ALASKA STE! LAUNDRY PEONE 15 iron L3N well AiIDE a4 E AVA v bills Dollar SPECIAL on CANNED GOODS The new & inches. SALE Giovanetti’s GROCERY PHONE 3-8-5 . TRANSFER Res. 148 aooD Motto GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING G. A. GETCHELL, Phone 109 or 149 Reviant Phone 149 COURTESY SERVICE REMEMBERS | 104TH BIRTHDAY | aad JTohann tel urprised | Our of Wunsi not a in fitt when he 1 dewrit lottor, ac h pregent of | sident von Min rocently by a ¢ Pr ) mark The birthday d smithy a the hape tha 104th the r oceasion anniyersary of Tha prosident that the active life to enjoy he; was expre mithy “af toil Ith and we! an ontinue of wonld | THE NIFTY SHOPPEE FRONT STREET KIDDIES NIFTY DRESSES | CLOSING OUT ! of PAINT to make roem for LE STOCK our new Grocery stock we are compelled to get rid of the paints we have on hanl. In order A reduction of 20% White and Orange Shellac Colois ground in oil Stove Pipe Enamel Floor Varnish Engine Enamel Japan Dryer on 21l of the followinz: Enamel Varnigh Stains House Paints Linoleum Varnish Auto Finish Asphaltum Varnish N BROS Free Deliveries (Formerly Hammexr’s Grocery) Phone 217 Men look twice at CLEAN TEETH OME teeth you never notice. Others you openly admire. . There is a fascination in the clean beauty that Colgate’s gives to teeth. As you brush, it foams in and out between your teeth, over the gums, about the tongue— always cleaning, always removing the causes of tooth decay. That’s why more men and women use Colgate’s than any other dentifrice. " SR k| & ¥. ICE clw F. ‘MER E. SM Phone No. 537,

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