The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 19, 1928, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE Table Linens Of course you want a good table cloth, one that will wear well and wash well, but more than that vou want iable lingn that not only looks well but that has beauty, good weave, and pretty designs. 70 in. Table Linen, floral designs, $3.75 vard 72x90 Linen Squares, floral destgns, 11.50 90x108 Linen Sauares, floral designs, $17.50 Napkins to match, $10.00 a dozen and up MERCERIZED CLOTHS 72 in. by 72 in. Mercerized Squares at $3.00 and 72 in. by 90 in. at $3.75 18 in. Navkins to match, $3.75 a dozen B. M. Behrends Co,; Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store et A A i et FAMED SPY 1S " FOUND, CHINA Time to Studying Buddhism PEKING, China, Jan. i9—lg- {naths T. Trebitseh’ Lincoln, whoss kaleidoscopic career includes ser- vice as a’ Church of England c.- rate, member of the British par- liament and German spy during the war, ha® turned up in Peking 2 in his decHning yoars and is Ja- 0 to live on the upper floor of th voting himse!f to study of Budd- whll(-hrl‘s (lle- y regretted by mu- palace-—that for the presex hism, tual friend: who remember the Jeast, the lower floor rooms Jincol; 1 o § brilliant social events in the Rein- guffice for the Hungarian ruilvhm!;: x;‘ ’v’t‘:};mnr‘;:r ‘t';:ee 1;:(11"1%: hardt home before the war. Twice tyte, Descsibed by those close to him a year the Reinhardts then threw n in h;nlth and open the “Palais Knobelsdorfi” in Peking last and its adjacent spacious garden quarters in a for a reception attended by not iler the alins n" able members of Berlin's artistic, | coguito Wa' A musical and court society 1 Y In addition to these brilliant so-| WIFE BACK ON STAGE; ] HOPE FOR RECONCILIATION TRAGELY TAKES ITS TOLL ON BERLIN, Jan. i» wife of Max Reinhardt, expects soon to return to the “Deutsch Theater,” scene of her former umphs, and to play such cla Else Heim:, | requisitioned the Palais Knobels- dorff, located near the University ; of Berlin, for the newly founded | Hungarian Institute. To compen-| 0. Pl | sate Reinhardt, the state plac:1 roles as Portia in Shakespe: 4 the so-called “Garden Hoyse,” “Merchant of Venice” and auxiliary building to Bellev title part in Lessing’s “Minna von | Castle, at his disposal. It is lo- Barnhelm.” | cated in beautiful Bellevue Park, Reinhardt agreed to this just|next to the Tiergarten. before sailing for America, aad While living quarters are this Berlin society hopes that this mey | provided for Max Reinhardt, prove a first step toward recoi-| Heims and her hoys wondered f ciliation of the two artists, la while what would b For a number of ye there | them. The Prussian min has been an estrangement | told them, however, to cont between Reinbardt and his wifs, come of Insil- e G. PAUL EMBRACES SLIPPERY SIDEWALK i H. Rul “And then {he sidewalk jumpsa tAMED 0 cial functions, the Reinhardts fre. YIBDt up and hit me on the o e v‘) e quently entertained after pre.|53id Gabe Paul today in 1 Her et e “~ !to curlous friends who g his injured proboscis. disclaims rumors that Lo tered the prize ring or ¢ kind of a ring i\ When « zmized im, Lincoln had visitel 44 ation, where he dis- closed his ldentity. disclaimed any intentions of agalnst i*h irtesests ¥ Par st ked that the Irgation do to destrcy ki mcomnity. offiefels, cenvinced of the but he did not injure | M 53 character of hiy visit to les for he had tne!ChibR. agreed. presence of mind to saatéh themy| When it boeame known thai off as he descended in the dircc. |t Quiet and studlous Herr Run tion of Mother Earth, Aside fron| Va8 really the internationally fa- a shake up and a moment or tw.|R0Us spy and. intriguer, however, of semi-consciousness, Mr, Paal}le Was so besieged, by newspaper {declared that he was nome the|MeN and others that he left his [ worse for the accident. frotel COfEERRaEE - far. deveesd | e s s S days* and o recently returned ! to take up humble lodgings over ':!a shop near the great Hata Gato. .|' Here he denies himself to all call- WHO'S WHO A donios himseit 10 o X AND WHERE | !uecnane‘:flth h; r:llxh)uu slu;l':-:. nfl———?——’——'fl:“uml only at rare intervals does W Ihe emerge to visit centers cf Six soldiérs trom Chilkoot, who|Buddhist wisdom and piety. iare ou their way to the Vancouver| Lincoln has asserted that he is { Barracks, Washington, passel |breparing & series of lectures on through Jus on the Admirsi|Buddhism which he intends to de- They are: Gerald Dri.!liver in Peking. . Anderson, Carl yL It was in ‘Ceylon in 1926 that cam, 11, O Mer [Lincoln learmed that one of his ens and 4. ¥. Deboid. sons, John mcoh‘,hwh being Trav salesmen leavin s | tried 'w" in “England. The here for Ketchikan on the Ad., father back to England, but {miral Rogers were C. M. Jones|the speed of British fustice mado Albert Brown and Sam Guyot. - [ it & losing réice, for the son was Assitant United States District | convicted hanged before he arrived. according to his Attorney George W. Folta anl James Wickersham, local lawyAr, jown account, he returned to Cey- lare Ketchikan-bound passengers 100, aios th g on the Admiral Rogers to attend ‘William F. Rohrbach, salesman the t { t i erm of court which started for the Hard Hat Company, this' week in the First City. Miss Mil g who i ‘An Junéau since 58 dred Anderson of the v uu!. Seattle on local U. 8. Bureap of Fisherios office, returned to Juneau om the steamer Alaska. Miss Andersor has been in the south the ' |seven weeks visiting with Prossia recently’and relatives in and near Seatile. l mieres. The German crown prince and crown princess often wer among the guests. Else Helws did the honors as hostess and was | famed both for her beauty and as | _ the principal feminine star of Reinhardt’s ensemble: estrangement Max Relnhardt quit the palace, ac- a bome in Vienna and the Palace “Leopoldskron” at Salzburg, and when in Berlin ie at a hotel. His wife and boys continued to live at Knobelsdorff. Woif- the elder som, 18, is a stu- ‘at Heidelberg University ‘he specializes in the his- Gottfried, 14, is ia DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JAN. 19, 1928, Is Burden of Presidential Worries " 'Reason for Coolidge’s Retirement? BEFORE | : £ (rnternational Tiustrated News) ' e - St-4tn of office tells heavily on our chief executives | Presidents Coolldge and Wilson, taken before assume after cne term in White House, as these pictures of | ing duties and afterward, plainly show. \ 5 of a great country en- HAT is the real reason O. P. he checked to his respor for President Coolidg’s startling refusal to @ cept a renomination? rer or later, the Presi- of these United Stat be relieved of a mass ril, and the work placed bordinates. The job pretty big one when pton tackled it, but it| cutive wi admitted that it’s| f on the altargrown somewhat bigger since an often repeat- his de at we ut one liv-| At any rate, this may be explanation for Calvin| idge’s refusal to seek an-| term and for his de- tion to allow the Repub- Party to “draft” him as| indidate. ‘CORDOVAN AND LOCAL LAWYER ING.0.P. RACE , and his Am- D‘. W. H- 1 formar Gladys ily broken ¢ uy th When he uttered the now,p famous phrase, “I do choose,” and when he phatically reiterated and | h plified that statement, | b x2a1 what impelled him to do 80?4 1y ¢ Surely he knew' that hel martyred had an almost united party|of behind him—a powerful chine that would tell in a Presidential campai provided, of course, the right ; man carried the standard. ar And surely he kn that| Whi the great majority of the G.!down too mn 50N wa ve | of 3| burdened | lic h the af-'i r of By WILLIAM F. BROOKS (er (Associated Press Feature Writer) ."f_‘:‘ WASHINGTON, Jan 19—Po- litically, socially, and legisiative- N ly speaking, the winter in Wash- ' of ington promises more in the way| Tayior. of excitement and interest to a Since disinterested orlooker than it has 1 [for years. The air is filled with the por tending clouds of the 1928 Presi- dential campaign storm. and Representatives w alendar. ways about Capitol Hill exwding! The d consciousness of the fuct that the dertalen nation’s voting eyes are uponc them. Every move is carefully io calculated to estimate its political|the gay significance. | season. Politics 18 further thrust tato prominence by the lo number | of announced and poteiiial ean- [didates on the floors of the House land Senate. Senator Hiram W Johnson \of California dcclares 95 of the $6 members of the Senate have their eyes cast covetously toward the White House. Chase and Wick- crsham File for Delegates aaugnter. to Coming Convention David W." Judge James Wickersham, attor- ney of this city, and Dr. W. H Chase, Cordova psysician and member of the Alaska Game Com- mission, today> filed their declar tions of ecandidacy for delegat to the Republican national con- vention this year. The filings had been expected for some time, as Judge Wickersham had announc- ed several weeks ago he expected to file and the report had bheen current for almost ag long that his filing wounld be accompanied by that of Dr. Chase. , AlasKa is entitled to but two delegates to the Republican na- tional convention. Three candi dates are mow in the field, th2 third being W. H. (Doc) Caswe!i, former Cordova and Valdez resi- denf, and now residing at Sitka. He is the only candidate makii any avowal of his political posi- tion up to the present time. 'At mid-Octc the debut- g from one holiday Christ- * plas ymatic corps has un- heavy s ral White added to s have the program of with import- relief, taxa- ver legisla- tion, Mus hoals, the future {of the n flood * control and dcores of other economic problems confront the legiglators. Because . {of the intricate these sub- Oulookers are placed in . the|jects are with the inter- Jongress ant subj tion, the way position of the small Loy al ajests of sections of the ring seircus whore the!country and be of the effect Washington social session is eon-{aetion upon might have cerned this winter. 7T list of jon next yes paign, many a debuta; mumbers ncorly halfjmember of Congress is expected hundred. Among then are Miss to burn the midnight oil in an Alice Dayls, daughter of the Sec-feffort to figsure Out a safe path. f War and Mrs. Dwight ———t ‘Miss Bi the time of his filing, he said he would support the candidate who had the support of administration leaders at the convention. ' — e ¢ Willlam L. Paul, Ketchikan man who has been in Juneau. for sev- eral days on business, is returning -on the Admiral = ’ th na Deneen, Charles Goldstein roturned en tor «nd Mra.ithe Admiral Rogers last evening, n of Illinols; | making the round trip to Skag- Szechenyl, elds way and Sitka, | | LU TR R T (LT EH TR i i Also steck of Beds, Springs and Mattresses - Juneau-Young Hardware Co. | Hardware and Undertaking Phone 12 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 it it cost more. It doesn’t. It really costs less and the trial will prove it. We carry a full ine of Feeds, D. B. FEMMER % Phone 114 R g ; New THIHTHH A specially purchased stock of new Dresses in Flat Crepe in tail- ored and fancy style are embroid- —s0ine ered, some are lac Aarimmed, others " fin- «ished in narrow leath- er belts in all the most popular spring shades. Sizes 16 to 46. IR R T S T TH L T January Clearance $12.75 = R LT TR T L L NEW STYLES IN SLIPPERS ENTICING (International lilustrated News)

Other pages from this issue: