The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 15, 1928, Page 2

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ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1928. | Herbert Hoovér, His F:‘lmig;;;n:l_ -'_Ifhcir California HUme KANSAS MAN ; ’ - SELECTED FOR | Father’s Day T i U - §¢ || SECONDPLACE ; ; . | Senator Curtis to Be Run- Remember Dad this year y ; . - . ning Mate with H. . j ' C. Hoover Sunday I's with a gift \torney of Shawnee Coun’y 'NM and-relected in" 1886, Curtis was elected to the Fifty- Third, Fifty-Fourth and Fifty- Fifth Congr s from the Fourth Kansas District and to the Fifty- Sixth, Fifty-Seventh, Fifty-} Eighth, Fifty-Ninth and Sixtieth Congresses from the First Dis-! trict; in January, 1907, was el- ected to the United States Senate to fill out the unexpired term of ; ; . = : 3 4 W Hon. J. B. Burton, resigned, suc- " S 7 N " ot hy o : i . 4 & ; 4 J % ] ‘ceeding Hon. A, W. Benson, ap- We carry the most complete e i ; 1 SOl ki e, P 2 p fanic . g 5 p 1 $ 3 4 full term beginning March 4. and H‘flSOHJI']} Prl“d line ; e 4 4 e L B o Curtis took his seat January f Men's F Bisies 3 1 3 ¥ i / g s 29, 1907. He was President pro i) ol Men's urnishings 3 3 ¢ ] § tempore of the Senate from De-| PARIS—Metal thread weaves cember 4 to December 12, 1911. retain their popularity. Jenny He received the pcpular vote rorlmnkns a two' piece costume of the nomination as the Republican [dark blue pleated crepe de chine candidate for the United Stdtes{skirt and a white and silver Senate in 1912, but lost the nom-|blouse bandeéd together . with ination under the distri¢t plan.|strips of dark blue silk in bold ) The Kansas Legislature in the|modernistic pattern. Thé blouse @) sessicn of 1913 provided for thefhas a high turn-over collar and . nemination of United States Sena-|a narrow belt of dark blue suede. A tors by direct vote of' the people - e, ! 4 & 1 B. M. Behreud' co. When Herbert Glark Hoover is not' called elsewhere by official duties, he and his family mzke their home on ths campus of Stanford ¥id &€ s pildaty Jn 1994, Mr. University, California. Their residence there is shown below. M‘r. Hoover, Mrs. Hoover and‘th:;rvelde_r s:nr; ll‘l;r’r-mrfbg:; fl‘e oh;;-ls:oy;?f Curtis received the nomination | SEVEN HOURS LIBERT graduates and Alan, the younger son, is a student there. At thz left is Mr. Hoover on the porch of his V ingto s al a g ¢ Tover Bemator 4. L. Beisilw, aud IN LAST TEN MONTHS Alan and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hoover, jr. at the election in November 1914 in Juneau. Juneaw’s Leading Department Store [ he defeated Hon. George A. Nee- Richard Joimson, wio complet- | populations of even the defeated' area of government and hulu.flrthR! \l I( H 1IR STYLES ley, the Dn{nm‘ruti(- ('flll(lld:\t(\,\(’:l a ten months sentence in the - | Central powers [th;m ever before. A and Hon. Vu'm_r Murdock, the|Federal Jail here l:te Wednesday e s 7 I | While the peace conference was| Mrs." Hoover ably seconds her Al Pregressive candidate. afternocn, for robbery at Wran- Republican Nominee i 2 A (wurlwr in truck gardens, and ministration, which Mr. Hoovoer! izing a simple mode of livin He | i to the Svm}lc N()vcm‘her 2‘. 1920, fll»!ll'. when he was arrested here For President Very |ter in city offices headed, was feeding children in!has much 1th, though there is By HAZEL REAVIS of the comb as- curling iror|reelected November 2, 1926 and fand charged with a similar of- " s ! Obtaine Educaticn 23 different nations, and adults’' never advertisement of it. He| PARIS, Juwe :>—Women who agies. The fact that women are|his term of service would expire|fense for attempting to break ('"l'('l'l". Efficient| ., upon obtalning an cduca-|in half as many. IL coped with' occuples an expensive but modest-! want to be “recreated” in Paris trying to disguise the evidence|March 4, 1933, into Grandma’s Kitchen on Wil- o 1 | tion, Mr. Hoover worked his way|typhus epidemics, and in many|ly furnished Washington house,| have strained the beauty busin that their hair is being allowed .- !uutzhhy Avenue. He is now back (Coatinuey trow Tage One ) into and through the then newly|places almost took over govern- in the same block with the re Imost to the breaking point, says {0 grow, together w_nh the m-._<ir;= 014 papers rnrsnl‘{u Jhe Emplre 'in the Federal Jail. - | founded Stanford University in|ment temporarily. Governmental' dence of the late President Wil-| Bmile, wielder of the curiing iron to “be different,” is recponsible i g | California, emerging in 1805 with| credits, charitable donations, and son. Another house, always con-[at a famous hairdressing estab. for bizarre hair styles, they say. lation fell into his department,’, geproe’ in mining eng ing ation of surplus war supplics! sidered the family home. was|lishment. Emile's employer is One cf the remarkable hair and he gave (s popularization the ;4 geglogy, In the succeeding|wore all involved. As lite as 1921 huilt for him on the campus of|limiting the number of customers styles suggestsd by one shop to powerful impulse of his Eemivs: g, yoppg first as mine laborer |there was still sonie localized' or-!Stanford University at Palo Alto.|he will accept cach-day for “re- women who want to be different for riveting public attention. He ./ 45 mine manager and opera-| ganization for feoding of children,{an institution’ in the service of|creative” treatment. 16 the Hottensot. .M. -oonuints ofca went through all the phases the .. "y, g)1 the deserted places of|and Mr. Hoover, then a cabivet|which He has spent time and| According to Emile, “be your- bush of hair held in place by broadcasting devotee excmplifies, o' woriq where mineral wealth| member, was able swittly . to ex-| money unfleggingly. | set is a motto without appeal to round combs which pull the hair a couple of years ahead of thel, w4 ne made for himselt a|pand this romnamt of the relief| i~ Y hiG sermiomig: back off the forehead. The cnds Rai howeyete S ':;"«‘”"'I‘i‘”":"‘;”“.‘\.n;j..u- reputation and a large| machinery when famine in Soviet, 3467 GIRL BORN | “They all want to be made dif- of the growing bob are frizzed, to o foitune To admitted technical|f 1 led to congressional ap-; — . I | ferent,” he said with a sigh, “and the extreme. A F P ll i tiomely &nd. proficiency as an _ensincer—his| propriations o help & starvingl o oo opi @ g Hihe pretty on e sty ey B Ll R g T R t I'air Favitlion ‘,:,':f(p;",f‘:;,,, ,‘:,.r-,",'i'}'fl".‘ m:‘,’ “.“',,“,':_,""”"" and monographs are stanc-|population ihere Thls Isst of o) Miss Muriel Femmer, are|dll. We make them different, but on a center part in back. Thel bod |ard textbooks in colleges today—|the enterprises which ho np'-mlv-nl;I_N,(,,v“,g congratulations cn the! sometimes it's a change for the back hair is combed forward over | SATURDAY JUNE 16 “"N‘h; Mooyers SRaTal o5 ol o/ Mr. Hoover combined proven abil| for supplying food to familsited JEEY 48 YRR Cl Sl o L worse, at least to my wey of the e and. covers. . the short ity in organizing and financing.|people on a large scale did not “ 5 Sabt | thinking, There’s such 2 thing front locks. This style is recom- and organization, extending cven| e 1 g ‘ jdnd a quarter pounds yesierday | hinking Tl s o CER R to the miiior matters of personal| 2o PocAmS identitied with ~ajwind up umtll 1 }atternberd’ at St Anw's Hospital, 88 160king too original. mended by hairdressers to women | | &youp_of offices in London and > ecentric hairdressing s on who are letting their back hair The dances given in Fair Building are not outfitting, gerves @' relsase hishyay york who engaged in mining Relief Entetprises PS8 8 <8 !time and energy for application ; o the increase, Emile’s colleagues grow. a private enterprise nor for individual gain |and metallurgical enterprises jn| NO part of the war activity Ha Ol pugers ot gavy at .l P P g in an extraordinarily wide field 4 Vapts s dhten ail’ (RN’ i o L but for the benefit of the Southeastern Alaska Tarly in life hb found the selopy.| moft Of the quarters of the. world ‘,',“,',“\.(..'r‘".;;'f.? J:,'.[:.,":r]]'f:,.”";,[,' 3;:, T O T T H B TN A T T BT TR T T T TR T T s o ¢ : | From West Australia he had|Hoo pris y Fair Association and are under management ing of clothes a nulsance, andl of Fair Association. ; | gone to China, and was engaged| United States and abroad, and ‘consequently standardized his mr‘m the development of coal atd|When in 1920, the season for pros- tire to a set of dark blue sults| o genosite when the Boxer re.|ldential politics opened, his nale and hard hats, samples of which pop0n cooped him up with other|Was early bruited about for the ’s P G Gorden’s Presents a Gorgeous : Showing he kept parked in a halt dozen| g oo FRE DAL BT T ere he| foremost political honor. the na- strategic poipts around the globe,| oot oo B Jags. po | tion can give. Thee was an eth- A complete new stock of summer wearables, dis- tinctive originations, at amazingly attractive prices. teady to don when the habili-ly Ty Tyl i B ved the| barrassing interlude, howeve ments Eutrently 'serving gave Way|)opyion prisonors, he had crgan.|When it appeared that his long to wear and weather. On jzed his first food relief, for Chi |life in the engineebing field and A marvelous group of both dresses and sports coats of kasheens, tweeds and mixtures. Regular value, suming office he put a clipping! $19.50. Specially price $12.75 to $29.50. {listening in through a homely and LU A Peppy Music 8l ese and other refugees. He built|Mis later war work had deprived bitreau methodically at tha work| o port there later, for th» own. |him of any partis: of nssemll}lnu all (le- adverse edl-| ...~ o the mining properties, and|!us Whatever. Workers his be- torial criticism of his conduct for thereafter in Burma, Russia, Alas |half had difficulty in settling up: his attention; blandishment and, . 01 Mexico, initiated or direct |08 a political party in which to Draise was left unread. AIways alcq ontarnrises which were for the|Join to forward his interests, and Student at heart, he has a dally| part successful. In 1913, i(!rur a time he was proposed as biindle of papers, articles, and dis- ;. ogtimated that 176,000 men|DOth a RepubMcan and a Demo- éussions of scientific, economic e employed by the corpora |C¢ratic presidential nominee. The . . » dr politieal subjects set aside for | oc FHERE OV g ac| New York World, for years a stal- s home reading at the late hm"]oxlwu!\vp engineer. He maintain | Wart Demo ic organ, warmly Just preceding sleep. ed his conmections with scholastic | espoused his canditacy, and there Executive . Talent and research activities as well |Were echoes 'Of SeRport 4. olRey {His own grdps of the theory|and found time during the period| Democratic papers i various sec. dnd practice of getting things! 0 translate, with the collabora | tions. Soon afterward, he lssued done, linked with the executive|tion of his wife, “De Res Metal.|an open letter declarins himself talent for finding and inspiring|lica” a Latin work which is thc|d Republican. But his cause did Nelpers, has put him above the eAiliest known treatise on iining |0t flourlsh, because it had be Hressure of routine in mercly run-|He was married in 1899 Miss Lou(hind it none of the party bosses. ding a government department,|Henry, a Stanford schoolmate, and| When his name was placed beforé #d six months after he entered|has two sons, Allan and Herbert | the Chicago convention ihiere was © cabinet he cmerged from a i g pontaneous ad vpru.zmm-rl ap- Nittigry spanding snd’ rodo. Aids Belgium | plause in the galleries, but scarce- m the work of the Ameri(ly a ripple among the delegates i > paus partl |y 7 [ delegates. znug of the bureaus particular radat sommilies that Everything for the Fisherman Juneaun-Y oung Hardware Co. HARDWARE and UND]’:}B’!‘A_KH‘IG_ i - aagcan extri-| He got only a handful of voles. assigned to him, freo for addk| cageq the American tourists of tlonal duty. 1914, Mr. Hoover was drafted im Accepts Post He was always thercafter """”'nm";\(elv to a far greater task When President-elect Harding; e the breeze for scent of new| .o erfort to feod dnd supply the|some months' later, offered him tings to do, and occasionig| gojgian population. He helpec|the post of Secrotary of Com some heartburnings among cabi-| oreunize the Commission for Re | merce, he accepted after stipt: net associates by reason of thelyoe i Bojgium, and took Its lead.|1ating that he was o have a free dhowing that “Hoover was always ership. It was not suspected of|hand in reorganization of his de- réady to slop over into anylhing| o time how far that task would|Partment. He succeeded to tho dnywhere.” | develop; when the work woung|Same place under President Cool- SThrough a door of his office up at the end of the war there|id8¢. During the later cabinet i the commerce department there|.q peen cxpended, mostly wndcr|changes he was successively ten: xs dug when he assumed theiyye goovers direction, §1,500,000,|dered the departments of interior | 5L a tiny opening, inconspicu-| oo advanced by loans from allied |And agriculture, refusing in each osly placed and coverod bY | yovornments or given by charity|cdse on the ground that his greaf- #llde, that & discrect secretaryiy s gperating @ floct of 200| St usefwlness would bo in the might observe the status of 80| Gloamships, and the peoples of|POSt he retainéd. fafrs within. A glance (NTOUEL|yorhern France and Belgium had| 19 addition to operating his if always discloses Mr. Hoover| . iioq during four and a half|OWN department, Mr. Hoover has {§) the rare moments when he Was| vouy " outy by its functioning, |served on the American débt unoccupied at his desk, striding|” i i commission and advised the White yhhurriedly but with persistance Food Administration House on many important qu 0. and fro across the room. There{ When the United States went|tions of poliey. Constantly active much about him to give |h4‘;ulm the .war, President Wilson|in enlarging the field of work of IHH IO RHERTRa s Kenmoor Coats Distinctive coats of fine woolens, many enhanced with rich furs—all sizes—regular value $65.00. Specially priced at $19.50 to $49.50. New Suits In' tweed, hair-line stripes and plain serge. Short coats, wrap around skirts. Sizes 16 to 42. ! Specially priced—$12.75 . Dresses ‘!P"‘:fl."’:r of controlled restloss| prompily appointed M. Toove: | his own department, he rorganiz Several racks of these cleverly designed dresses onscious that) food administrator for the United|ed its foreign trade scctions, sum- 3 . . l | d wid; reency would give him de|States, though the latier remained | moned conforerces (o deal with at special vacation prices — sleeveless an '3‘:1‘: TR e R e the- pout, whieh| (BIAMK EFUad: Bopbéssatnd rrg sleeves, and in summer’s most fashionable mater- L o g st, - S o psented 2 - & 5 2o Introduced to Public war time experience in other|ernment in major industrial dis- lflls‘fig“l‘ed l”’i“"’ and pblka dots are especlally Fhe war was the occasion offcountries had proved one of the putes, and appeared as the presi: Introduction of Mr. Hoover to| most difficult to hold, Mr. Hoover|dent’s representative in the ini- feat“red' general public, but his career|told friends he “expected to die|tiation of national engineoring $9.75, $12.75, $16.75 to $29.50. § accomplishment had beenlon the first barbed wire cntangle-| enterprises, such as the St. Law- ch beyond ordinary long be|ments” His success, however,|rence canal and the Colorado ba- Born in West Branch, lowa,| soon was conceded uniyversally.|sin compact. st 10, 1874, the son of a{On the war boards which super-| Organization of campaiens to gsmith and a Quaker mother,|vised the nation's task of muni- reduce waste in industrial opera- had Mfll orphaned by death tioning the vast army and navy| tions, to prevent accidents in parents before he was|created for the struggle, he be-|traffic, and to conserve fisheries, years old. Relatives, with|canie a dominant figure, and at|are among minor activities he has he them made his home,|the moment of the armistice, his|undertook. The commerce depart- fegon, and at 13 yearslurzanlzauons functioned to sup-|ment, under his leadership, has the task of Mr. and Mrs. Coal Consumer: Admiralty Island Furnace Coal should not be confiised with Screenings, it contains much gparse coal walnut size and smaller, in fact many of the coal users find it ideal for their cook stoves and heaters. Try a few sdcks next timie you are order- ing coal. We know you will like it anid’ call for it often. ' And the price too keeps the coal bill down. Order from your own coal dealer or transfer man. The Admiralty Island Coal ry office with H. R. Shepard sand Son "'“i’i? Seward Street p%".f‘m A R BRI TR R AT ASETAF COEPEA TR AL S A AL AL OO LA REETITIR I MM B M R Ply and feed the exhausted city|taken an interest in a far wider | 1

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