The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 26, 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 NEW BLOUSES FOR MILADY We have just received a new shipment of blouses Not just a few—but many that will interest Milady. delightful styles to choose from. + in -l\lt-. and now is the time to make your comir Blouses are again selection. There is the smart, double breasted vestee style blouset, the swagger tailored style blouse with " cluster 'pin tucking for trimming and many othér In a wide sizes 34 to 42. modes. At fancy: two pr ices, range of colors, ]lldlll ‘ih'll)(‘(l or 2.75 and $5.00. ¥ THE WORLD’S FINEST HOSIERY NOW SELLS AT LOWER PRICES Smart style and outstanding economy always have made Phoenix the preferred hosiery. Now you ean buy the same fine quality, the sheer flawless tex- ture, the delicate, modish colorings at a still greater savi o ng. at the new prices: $2.25 pair 736 Ser-fon weight $2.00 pr. We Now Carry the Exquisite Blue Rose (Lanchere) Toilette Requisites This world famous hosiery is now to be had No. 791 Service weight $2.00 pr. No. 381 Spire heel ... i From drowsy hillsides in far-away Bulgaria are gatl: gred the myrmd blooms whose bouquet is captured in Blue Rose. have distilled. this fragrant essence with infinite Skilled perfumers patience, carefully b blending with precious Attar of Rose, rare oils /rom Italy and the Medi- terranean slopes of Fran ce. Their achicvement is a charming enticing fmgmnm-, as alluring as it is elusive. A complete variety of toilette re- . quisites is obtainable, all perfumed with the distinctive Blue Rose Fragrance. B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store “Ali Baba” Is Coming Friday and Saturday FOREST TALK IS GIVEN BY GEOFWEISEL Prominent Lumberman| i Addresses Students of *. High School they effect your your individual fu- ure,” was the subject of the talk l}eorgu ¥. Weisel, formerly from | Montana, and now in ferested in the Juneau Lumber Mills, gave in the high school 4uditorium_yesterday afternoon at 1 o'clock in accordance with the program for Forest Week h All students from the sixth gra up were present to listen to Mr. Weisel, who spoke exceedingly well on a_subject with which le fs very familiar. He was in full ¢harze of the American Forest Week activities in Montana during 1925 and 1926 and was on the ex- ecutive committee for American z:rast Week for that state since organization in 1920. “Forests as gountry and Missoula, # Forest Depletion | “Mr. Weisel said that in his life- time he has seen two regions de-| pleted of forests, each in the short space of 20 years. One in Minne-| sota where he lived as a child, he remembered as having appar | ently inexhaustible white pine for-| ests, with sawmills running night| and day, and rivers filled with logs. When he returned to that) country two years ago there were né mills, no logs in the Tiver, nothing but desolate countr which was cut over twenty yea ago, with most of the former resi- dents gone to seek new fields. He efitountered the same experience| in"“Montana which was virgin tim-| ber country in the beginning. an( fall when he wént there he rml ‘ticed no ‘trees and the railroads were running into the hills for| timber. ‘The lumber operations to be movl‘n; ever westward, ‘and unless précau- , the Pacitic Goast e the same experi- ‘anuquence of this, “once thrown ‘caretully utllized, and’ h more than {lem ! trees are planted by than one principle industry, Mr.! Weisel sa When that is true, if one industry fails, another will make up for it. For instance, in Alaska last year the fish didn’t run, which indicates that Alaska should not depend y upon the fishing industry, he said. 80 billion feet of timber seems large in Alaska, it is not so v much compared with other tions of the country which have been cut over, he affirmed necessity to protect what we have was st ed by Mr. Weigel. The United States is a rich country with natural resources and great people, but the people must have recourses for progress, he de- clared. Mr. Weisel mentioned the prob of supplying lumber to the ditionary Forces in nce learned th ry hundreds of now mnearly all o nd, he s One-fourth of the area of the country is covered with forests, which are utilized even to the for. est cover. He saw 5 million trees in the forest of the Landes which sons of fore ago and were planted like an orchard, and | most of this forest was originally | planted by Napoleon srotect his military roads. The trees, es- pecially hardwoods, are all mark- wd and numbered in e, he declared. 1In Germany the same sort of forestry is observed, ac- cording to Mr. Weisel. Dr. Schenck, cerman forester, who started the first Forest School in the United States, is now on the Pacific Coast on a lec- ture tour and Mr. Weisel, a per- sonal friend of his, is trying to to While | The | get him to visit Alaska with “q’ group of students. The pulp mills ‘will be a twelve [ Wefentific 'EXPEDITION IS - HEADING NORTH PRINCE RUPERT, B. C,, 26.; — ‘Enroute to the Islands and Siberfan coast on expedition, Capt. Rob- ert Bartlett has brought the schooner Effie M. Morrissey here from Seattle. The hooner will carry the Stoll-McCracken peédition into the Arc hope of finding a cave which shelters prehistoric mumthies. The members of are due to arrive from the East. here today I WEISEL TO SPEAK /AT C. GF'C. MEETING TOMORROW “NOON George F. \Vewt‘l vestor in the a recent in Junean Lumber Mills, will be fhe principal speak- er at the meeting of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce fomorrow noon in the display rooms of tl Alaska Electric Light and” Power Company. The subject of his talk will be, “Forest Economi as Ef fecting the Futura of Alaska.” Mr ‘Weisel, who has been in the lum- ber business since a younz man was formerly at Missoula, Mon- tana, and has been act programs since the week was first establishes. His talk to the Cham ber will be the wind-up of th» observance of Forest Week in Ju-! neau, which has been sponsored by the American Legion Post of this city. Souvenirs appropriate to Forest Week will be given to the mém- bers of the Chamber tomorrow noon and music will be hed | by the Moonlight ers. Luncheon will be prepared by the women of the Martha Society. |TWO NEW DOMESTIC CORPGRATIONS FILE ARTICLES LOCALLY Articles of incorporation of the Golden Bear Mining Company and Apri! | Aleutian | the expedition | e in that| * | state in carrying out Forest Week | Blue Island Packing Company, domesti¢ corporations, were filed today in the office of the Secretary of Alaska. The former is engaged in operating a quartz mine in the Wasilla district and the latter owns a fox ranch in Blue Fox Bay, Black Island and plans to engage in packing fish. The Golden Bear Mining Com- Di s understood to have fi- xmm d the Gold Cord property in e Willow Creek region. E. H. Bartholf, pioneer mining man of that district, has interested Los Angeles capitalists in the | mine and finances are said to be | assured for operation and expan- sion. Directors in the new com- pany William ' R. Law, E. Llev yn Overholt and Mildred Beckwith, all of Los Angeles, and Mr. Bertholf. Incorporators and directors in the Blue Island Packing Company are: - George Hogz and D, H. Hogg, of Kodi and Walter Hogg uf Dallasg, Te: Hll‘ h th — - DAWSON WILL HAVE | ‘The Yukon Consolidated Gold { Corporation, at the héad of whith is A."N. C. Treadgold and which includes all the Treadgold inter- ests and those of the Yukon Gold, so-called Guggenheim interests, is | planning to operate five dredges, | two hydraulic camps and three electric shovel8 in operation in the Klondike this year. Three dredges will be operated on the Klondike and Bonanza Basin section, one at Granville and one at No. 17 Dominion Creek. There will be an electric shovel at Granville, one on Hunker Creek and one on Quartz Creek. Hy- | draulic operations will continue at (rullnu and Lovett Gulches. — gt JOHN RADOVICH IMPROVED Radovich, of Douglas, who ente Ann’s Hospital April 23, is slightly improved y according to hospital auth- orities. AT THE HOTELS Gastineau ! E. Fermanto, Excursion David Mar, Port Althorp, ‘i Alaskan ‘ John | | | | Inlet; CREAM .o month proposftien ' and a perma-| nent industry, Mr/ 'Weisel said, re: garding the proposéd pulp’ mills in Alaska. Fire in the forest is the great i est risk of all, declared Mr. Wei- sel. Even though there is a great | deal of rainfall no care should be was |, overlooked to prevent them, his conclusion. Mr. Weisel will speak at the Chamber of Commerce on Friday regarding orest economics as affecting the future of Alaska.” These educational talks: are giv- en under the auspices of the American Legion which has charge| the observance of Forest Week | here. W. H. SHELDON BETTER W. H. Sheldon,.!who is employ- ed at the Juneau Lumber Mills, and has been very i1l in St. Ann's Hospital since April 17, showéd slight improvement yesterday and today, it was sgaid at the hos- pital - ————— COMET IN PORT The Comet, Capt, Joe Dempsey, |fe—m—r— Libby, McNeill and” Libby cannery, tender, arrived in port. this mom' ing from Taku Harbor. ——eeeo—— FOR Q) SERVICE CALL 137 K . GORHAM Contractor or by the four. % Such as carpenter, = masonry, shingling, plumbing, kalsomin- ing or painting, in fact anything in new or repair work. ady. PHONE 137 CALL ME GEE BEE and. call me when you want GOOD plumbing, ‘heating ' 6r' sheet metal work C!.IEA Largest and finest display of plumbing fixtures in Alaska. O GEO, B. RICE PLUMBING HEATING SHEETJM@L "I tell you in advance whnt jub wiil eul" 41 ptsisne PO St dnaias | H. A. Berry, Taku Harbor. f TARTAR I-hia is the only one that carries the weight on the label in plain figures so that you may know you are getting a full pound and not just 3/4 of a pound that looks like a pound. n. The House of Qufl“y lld Economy sev. | ACTIVE MINING SEASON AR PARIS — Paul Poiret advises trousers instead of a straight foundation skirt for a white chif- fon dress heavily beaded in black with a motif of white crystal around the waist. The effect, when the wearer is standing still, is al:iost the same, trousers or skirt. e, ROAD SCRAPERS HERE Two new one-man road scrapers, property of the U. S. Bureau of Public Roads, were received here on the steamer Admiral Rogers. One will be shipped to Seward on ¥ boat, while the other is It you ne:a 4 good carpanter phone 498. Hardy Andy’s Shop. A. P. LAGERGKEN, Prop. adv. Bakino| Powder Balu Powder That Conlum More Cream-of-Tartar —the safe; wholesome aking powder base: This is thek moneybachk kind—$2 for {::rcnk:»or $1 for 'your iscuits-any time you don't like the results with Schilling Baking Powder GEORGE - BROTHERS w"“”"“* We can supply all your needs for sprmg House Cleamng Juneau-Young Hardware. Co. 1 HARDWARE and UNDER EAKING o Alaska Steam Laundry “SERVICE and QUALITY” We Can Prove It DRY CLEANING PHONE 15 PRESSING NOW A Painless Permanent W ave The Kew Fredencn Vita-Tonic Compcund Is the /\nswer AT TERRELL’S—$15.00 FRESH TENAKEE CRABS CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 “Best in Everything” Old Papers for sale at Empire Oflice % QZ—PHQNES—% s CREPE DE CHINE SKIRTS and SILK and KoorL MIXTURES With bodice ‘top o{f soft batiste—man diff t, A to42. ahotaledbohobok Actedasiolael! Sweaters ALL RAYON. AND WQQL SWEATERS, Smart in low button styles and ‘[ : necks — Slip-ons in a’ gay vnrwty of; sport colorings —'rayoft ‘and'’ tm‘ weaves and' ombre -tfipes $3.75.t0 $7.95. 14 Lo - y ‘m imluded SMART BLOUSES Double breaxted and ll styles— long sleeves - fagotting and tucking. Coiyn-—whlte beige, tan and' hlue. e 3 1 -

Other pages from this issue: