The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 6, 1927, Page 2

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Smartest of New Fashions for Fall--- The new Dresses for Fall are the straight lines of former seasons and most pleasing, softened by the addition of draped effects, tiers, flares and uneven hemlines in these new Dresses which we show for the first time for your sclection of new Fall Frocks. And you will be doubly pleased because of the rea- sonable price. $19.75 to $50.00 B.M. Behrends Co., lic. 1 Juneau’s Leading Department Store | . | tatives from every place on tue DRESSES ARE | coast, from Honolulu to Alaska DHEDGE BURNS "All luncheons were held at tho y | Palace Hotel, and a dinner dance | Beach, in fact the whole- | {sale dealers did everything to 4% . | make the week a hap ¥ !cording to Miss Grab ! Movie W Iso oc — she was outside and was mad: B #in : § | espectally Interosting by the pre-! ., X Women Refuse to Give Up|sence of chartie chaptin ana' Fire Destroys Dredge Dig- |many other moving picture cele- hrities in San Francisco at | time. . | Weather Perfect “The weather was perfect while I was in San Francisco, never tog cold uncomfortably ir | Comfort Declares Leona Graber ging at Wrangell Nar- rows—Work Stopped that Fire from an unknown ofig.: last Saturday completely destr. y- “Dresses are shorter than ever| for this fall, in spite of the ef forts of the wholesalers and d or warm od the dipper, dredge. being us-d signers,” said Miss Leona Gral attle it was very warm, butlin oxcavations on the Wrangel! buyer for the dry goods and ready | ! rather enjoyed it,” declaved Miss | Narrows — chanmel improvement to-wear departments of B. M. Boh.! Graber. project, halting this hal&-miltion rend's store, whn returned on th Many new gowns, evening, ard dollars job temporarily at leas’, || Narrows o | s ddegmemsnssosdesmsesi s g e picture favorite half of which is bros I the other haif tan. The jucket is di 10 the skirt. {International Tustrated News) 1 high tides, mMaj. lotte sa While generally the ('Ilannvlh decper and wider than when wo started ' last summer, it lacK tiuch . of being completed. Nor of ‘the shoals have been furngil over. to the Government and it 18 podsible that left by -the dredging have raigsed the bottom Vessels proceeding while they temporarily do 'so at risk. through are opencd their owr AT THE HOTELS | (R (2 prtmnc T oY T Gastineau L. V. Westerman, Seattle; Frark Dowd, Seattle; H. L. Shafer. attle; Mary Kolasa, Lewiston, Idaho; Janice Lowe, Spokan E: Wald, Kent, Wash.; Mrs. Peterson, Ketehikan; J. R. nolds, ‘SBeymour Canal; C. Jones, Unalga; C. V. Rudolph, Un alga; J. J. Meherin, ‘city; Mrs §. J. Kane, Hoonah; Mrs. L. D Littlepage and children, Apex Ei Nido; 'Wm. Noble, Tenakee; \. Halls, Seattle; C. F. Jones, Wran- gell; 'Miss Ann Bohwer, Spokane; Theodora Budwin, Spokane; Luctle Bdwards. Seattle; Tom Scott, P ershurg; Jack Robertson, Oakland: Mrs. Bdward E. Zimmer; Annie Akeryik and children; Ollic Os- kolkof?; John Lawrence and w . afternoon, and sport frocks of all] .| kinds were Dbrought back to Ju- cisco. |neau for the feminine population to choose from, hy Miss Graber “Apparently women refuse 1 i1 o et : PP Y in addition to complete lines of|the concern dol o comfoit | 1} nE. the . 1 give up the freedom and comfoi | goods, notions, gloves, chi |endeavor to macurd, Knother dredgé Dorothy Alexander from a it was announced today by Maj weeks' buying trip to San 4 Douglas H. Gillétte, ‘Acting DIs: trict Engineer: ’ 5 ? the short skirts, for there 1| . L o ‘ln?li:nuun Mot tere will ool 00se Kimonas, pajumas, infants| ithout delay. ami ¢ porth N ihabne (o Nauth, for. oma | s for infants, umbrellns, | to resume aperations as” soon ng Hine 2t any rate. The lines are| ™ everything to fill the necd,| possible. Maf. GHletts, - Himseit. {or please the taste of discriminat-|will leave hert -later This week tg lelds, Chicago and are expecte:| Oil Takes . Fire Graber, in discussing the latost; = - ! trends in the mode. |on an early boat. ' e —— “Black is the ‘avorite shaie blaze, The dredge had filled Its oil tanks. and had been hauled up !on the heach for some minor re: | pairs. The. fire started after 1 { was beached. It spread rapidly to | the oil which toak afire and bu:o- for fall, though many bright col-| ors will bhe worn to vary the| somberness of too much Dblack. | One of ‘the most remarkable things | ® noticed in the way of fashions | Frenzier Father Kills 'l'l'.':e:Y Then Suicides (PR thb amaztig prevalenco of) - SPORANI h. Cep ed so fiercely that rescue boats felt hats, they are worn with| ¢ : . £ everything, from evening gowns| o :n':':!hcn;hl:hat%r;:x;ro::hwc;z;: to gingham dresses now. O ¥ 3 §oavg .| the flames, 1 fath Work will be at .a standstill withy .l in the Narpows until a new dredge d then blew hiz|ean he purchased and broughe north. Maj. Gillette said it was believed quick action would he taken by.the comntractors. The time limit on the preject expires nex' May and the contrgctors, it was pointed out, camnot take a chance on havipg the, wark_ incomplete. after that date. The Narrows are said to be opep to all sqrts of navigatien, large. steamers as well as for smaller, craft, it would.be well for is ot to attempt except on the casionally a velvet or silk I seen, but ii is exceptional,” Miss, Graber said. I shat a friend g Coats All Fur Trimmed ‘own brains out. ‘The coats are lovely this yeer.| Adam Heimbinger, railroad la- with liu'lr fur trimming. Even lh:ih ver, after apparently quarreling childrens coats have luxurious furf yith pis divorced wife, slew bin collars like those for grown-upi!daugnter Gertrude, aged 7 years, sport coats and dress coats, ul'lher mother, shot his son then ~ have the fur trimming in co™-|brought down his friend James mou, it is more popular than ever|Koloft before committing suicide. before,” Miss Graber went on, tak | The hoy and girl have bheen kep:, out many of the models she|j, a Children's home here sine: brought baek with her to prove|the divorce of the father and 5 | mother. . the time Miss Graber —————— BSan Fraucisco “Buysr|Good Old Fashion BIRCH BER wis held,, with represer-| Your grocer has it. whe a pla mowed them ¢ 3 W | nesoll, -Warm_Springs; James Alaskan ,Angus. Johnson, . city; Iyer dock; Tenakee; H. ;pl\%g:? CIm‘;l s Saar, i pe, and - wife, wm&:r' city; “R.7 8! cit; en, King Cove; ity; Ole Sed: Bagnhart, Jr, ;‘J:;be‘:';,‘fitu :‘:‘:.m:"ml;.;:m‘fi:h):; ing bu she said. While most | confer with: ager, ‘McCuray; | Unal H, Kuchen, Killisnoo; b. B et Lo with tlors of | Ofsthe lines are already on hand | who 18 fnch the, dredging, l}'{"‘;’,‘ K"“"“:?_"“""“‘ g Wi vers O'lsome are coming from Marshal| relative to. futues drédging. ' Tengkee; . Wm. H. Reed, De ruffles or drapes,” declared M i) ratyr, Wash.; . Ward, Unalga; The dredging congern was nat | B. 0. Goebel, city; Ralph Treffers, able to determine the origin of the | Petersburg; Tord Butler, city; M Goldberg, Seymour Canal; F der, Sumdum. - Zynda Mick Thomas, Seattle; Waltay Bitts, city; V. Bourgette, Seatt Helen E. Gray, Rozeman, Mo Frank A. Pettit, Petersburg; F nica Zimmerman, Portland, Ore.; Mrs. H. Ashley, Skagway; Mus. E. Moffatt, Skagway; G. M. Tay lor. Atln, B. Eight Killed in Sny- YQUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Sept. &, ?.ln)dwluckl. aged 53, in the shooting of Saturd: night when Tony Decapua Kkill to eight. Three other persons, including policeman, were s street dress with a pleated skifl: i n and thi vided in the same way, alternabi in places: windrows | operatione | slightly. | the | Shooting Afinqm _With the death of Ferdinaud, the deatn 4| tion or hobbles. Ho rides a bit and seven members of his family, rose| ) Goodwinski, & nelghbor was st Ihospitals, Decapua tried to escaps by Decapua when he ran into|from the hospital where he was the Jatter's home on hearing shots. | taken but was bronght down by a, ® guard with a shot in the leg. i Peter _Austeris are ), &rly loday Peter, Austerick, § THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 6, 1927 Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: | Ra vl warmor t and Wednesday; fresh southeast winds. LOCAL DATA lime— Barem. Teiiy, Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 8 p. m. yest'y. . 29.89 b4 €3 W 14 Clear 8 a. m ».80.02 47 97 S 3 Cldy Neor toc 30.00 50 84 SE 13 Misting | CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS | RABTRREEY . T o IRDAY Highest 3 pm. | Preciy 8am. temp. ¢ 24 hrs. Weather 12 48 18 0 Paul 42 42 50 Harbor.. 58 54 0 52 50 42 48 -— Rain 64 56 52 16 22 Kain | Tuneau 58 54 47 3 Trace Cldy Ketchikan b - t 03 Cldy Prince Rupert.. 54 54 42 1.34 Foggy Jdmonton 46 * 0 Cldy Seattle 588 54 50 8 30 Cldy Portland 66 62 52 580 18 24 Cldy san Francisco.. 70 66 60 10 0 Clear *—Less than 10 miles. NOTE: Observations at Juneau Prince Rupert, Edmonton joattle, Portland and San Francisco are made at 4 a. m. and 4 p. m., Juneau tim The pressure is below twenty-nine inches at Duch Harbor and moderately high off the British Colum Coast, and is fall ing rapidly on the Bering Sea Coast. Moderate showers haye cn general on the coast of Alaska and southward to Oregon emperatures have risen somewhat in the western portion of the srritory. ales were reportel yesterday morning in south- ern Bering | Andrew Mellon, practically drafted into politics at the age of ..| 67, has been so successful that he may be a tandidate for President, He's shown at his desk—a fitting pose because he’s a business man at heart. Mellon, Business Man, Enters Politics at 67 T Phis is one of a series on presidential possibilitics by Fred L. | Lindelton, Washington correspondent of the International Illus- i trated News, My, Lindelton is writing about personalities, not politics; Gty o g g " By FRED L. LINDELTON ° International Hiustrated News Staff Correspondent wets say he’s dry and the drys say he’s wet; but, jusi_the 5 + f ne -1 same, Andrew William Mellon is pretty generally conceded to be most efficient boss that the Treasury Department """ Jere's a man who doesn’t know a thing about politics ; is f a sather retiring disposition—a man of great wealth who gave up everything to serve his country at a difficult post and at a trying time 'in the nation’s affairs, " Iv's fortunate that Mellon consented to be drafted into service when he did, Those post-war problems were tough ones, but the | Pittaburgh banking gran aqon g8inel plays golf a bit, but b nfidence of the business in- and managed to get by these ctse is walking. He bling-blocks successtully. travel, but seldom fin ellon has unquestionably im- to indulge in it. u"i“ the enmity of several bloes Mellon may kave m for his stand on varlous matters, Sheck account, but but griends point out that he caught without a e« one-fifth off the public debt ot 26 billion dollars, and lopped over | two billion dollars from the people's annual tax bills. Mellon assumed office at the age of 67. He was immediately plunged into battle after battle, but gen- erally emerged a victor. Which tsm't bad record for a political | tyro at that age. FRAIL 0 Mellon is small of stature an rather, frail of physique, but he can up under the gaff. He is sparing of words, and if he should land the Republican nomina- might prove to be even more g s Sp than Coolidge. ‘Despite the fact that he's one of the wealthiest men in America, he practically no time to recrea- chief exers 1 of oeean the chance in n been Wi ns into a taxi to reach his offic he got there he found he didn't have any money. PRISONER The taxi driver was hard-bolled. He wouldn't believe that his pas- senger was the Secretary of the Treasury. Sf the chauffeur locked Mellon inside the cab and held him there until a messenger could be sent inside the building to borrow the fare from one of the officlals. Mellon was married in' 1900, at the age of 45, to Mora McMullen, of Pittsburgh. They were divorced in 1910, but their two children, Paul and Allsa, remained with thelr father until last year, when Ailsa became the wife of David K. ste Bruce, son of Senator William Cabell Bruce of Maryland. aged 35, shot and killed his wife R killed by a fusillade of shots e a polide squad sent to am e v —————— WHEN YOU NEED-A CARPENTER in their home not far from the{l Decapua home. He' was shot and |{ "EVE[{YTHI."\'C FOR THE HUNTER” Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. Phone 103 or see 3 | AL LUNDSTROM . BUILDING REMODELING CONTRACTING Work by Hour, Day or Week e T HAVE YOU TRIED FRYE’S BABY BEEF? IF NOT—WHY NOT? FRYE-BRUHN COMPANY Phone 38 2 Deliveries Daily -3 FINE FAMILY FUEL for those wise enough to order their coal and kindling here. Have us deliver you at your address and note how much better heat and cleaner fires you have. Wouldn't ask you to do this if it cost more. It doesn’t. It really costs less and the tria) will prove it. We carry a full ine of Feeds.. D. B. FEMMER ! Phone 114 i | WHEN IS TOMORROW ? Red cents make Green bank-rolls _ Most failures in life may be attributed to wrong thinking and procrenination‘ Tomorrow never comes! Get your child one of our HOME SAVINGS BANKS so that, together, we may-teach him the value cf th i habit—TODAY—not tomorrow! e First National Bank “There is po Substitute for Safety” i D e HEATING REPAIRING | SANITARY PLUMBING " All Work Done to Comply with City Ordinance AT LEAST POSSIBLE COST 17 YEARS UNIVERSAL EXPERIENCE “Let Me Tell You What Job Will Cost” : Call STEVE STANWORTH Phone 215, Res. 505. Shop rear Harris Hardware Co. “He Profits Most Who Serves Best” F. WOLLAND MERCHANT TAILOR . TELEPHONE 66 JUNEAU, ALASKA FRONT STREET 'NORTHE ROOMS—50 cents per

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