The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 8, 1928, Page 2

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65¢ shades. ) 42, Guaranteed colors. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNFSDAY AUGUST 8, I928 Thrifty T[ulrsday AN ECONOMY EVENT., FEATURING HIGH QUALITY RA Y()N I/ L Ts Regular $1.25 Sunbeam Vests i;’l I;uslv! In sizes 38 * Pillow Cases Manhattan Regular 35¢ Cases in size 12x36 b ming. Thursday only. . 30¢ Pillow Regular efore hem- 75¢. Turkish Towels, 50¢ ixcellent qm\hty ¥ that will give endless wear. Pure white Turkish, size 22x44, Ladies’ Broadcloth Smocks $2.50 OTHER T B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Reg Orchid, Rose. lars and cuffs. HRIFT SPECIALS IN THE STORE lar $3.00 Broadcloth Smotks, . Blue, Plain or with cretonne col- Juneaw's Leading Department Store The ninth consecutive product rimage ’lay, the Life of Christ, is heing made Yy a group of 1os Angeles players headed by lan MaclLarcn in the role of the “Christus.” WAbove, Jeft to right, “Christus” on the march SUPPORT IS PLEDGED T0 6OV, SMITH NEW YORK. Aug. 5—Frank W, Murphy, of Wheaton, Miltésotu, :uiumo to the Republican’ Nation. al ‘Convention, in KL . Te- celved at the Democratic Nationa} Comtinittee, announced supfort of Gov.- Al Smith and opposed: tp Herbert C. Hoover, as ’un'"ynwa, thetlc and unfriendly towart ag- " riculture. § UMBUS, Ohlo, airn, of Washington, member of the Farm Committee Aug. 8.—Ad P, C, of 1 22 fostering the McNary-Haugen| * bill; announces support of Gov. Al Bql'tgl for the Presidency. l!lpw YORK, Aug. 8.—Newt Morris, of Georgla, who as dele josed the nomination of Gover. A “mor Al Smith, has called upon the of the South to suppor: ‘Smith’s candidacy. y sad word that Gustaf A. , < President of Seims & road builders of Spo- - died Il. 7 o'clock this in Spokane was received oftice of the U. 8. Bureau 1l in ion of the Pil- of. Jetusalem. to'the eross, and the Savioyf wlfli the el s!«min' Lelow, Mafy” Birbes'. imm Magtlalene, and Bertram Grssly, who plays the role of Judas. (International tifustrated Npws) lan antomobile wreck near Spo- |kane last winter. His firm has been active in roed building in Alaska scveral years and Mr, Carlson vizited in Juneau the' early part of last menth on businese. He had many friends here who monrn his loss. Mr., Carlson was somewhat over 160 years of age.” ‘He is survived by his. wife, one son and. two daughters, who live in Spokanc. The firm of Slems & Carlsor has been active in - Alaska since 1922 contracing for the U. S Bureau of Publlc Roads projec in the Territory. It. built . the Tee Harbor seetloh. of Glacier tighway, roads at Cordova, Sew is building roads at’ Ketehikan, Hyder and Point Agassiz Mr. Carlson visited Juneau and jother parts of Alaska in conncc- [tion with r since ritory. — e NEW F. S. RANGER NEAR ”COMPLETION v ranger vessel now un. tion by the U. 8. For- its Marine Wa n, should be in opera ssion in a little more than a month, according to M. L. Mer- assistant district foreste, who inspected the vessel on a re. cent trip to Ketchikan from which he returned yestreday. The vessel will be known Ranger VIII, and is for use in the ) Ketchikan district, being assigned to the Ketchikan rafger. It is similar to the Ranger VII, stationed at Juneau, although some improvements have been made, in- his firm entered 1 work nearly cvery | the | ard and Ketchikan-and this year | | | | | | | \ | | | CORBFAY Y for the galley, a field oftice and general - stora The Hanget' Vil js 50 toet lonk. with a 12:fotit beam and i§ poW. cred with a 45-hp. Fairbahks- Morse deisc] én; ite. There are sleeping accommadations fot flve men. Heat is supplied by an Ar. cola he .ulng hlwt el The vonul ¥, !he secotid! to, e hulkt at Kt-tcmlmn by thie 7F9) | Service the fifyt being the cqmlnu\m‘ (presoht VI whith 7 Wigs years; ago. # in charge:gts Service pogt: Arrivals from Funter Bay on the Margnita #ncluded Henty Roden, local attorney, been on a short business trip. George Kennedy, former Ju- neau resident s aboard the Al- aska enroute to his home in An- chorage. He has been in the States some time. Mrs. B. M. Goddard is return- ing to Juneau this week on thef teamer Queen. She has been visiting with her husband's par- ents at Goddard Hot Springs re- cuperating from a recent major operation. —— WALDAL SELLS HALIBUT The T-64, Capt. Fred Waldal, brought 4,000 pounds of hallbut to Juneau today. It sold to Elton Engstrom, buyer for the Alaska Fish Brokerage, at 9% and 6. flers ¢f Tammany ' [vocating banishment of prohibi- " |erago that i |ship ot 1llinols democracy when “|tragedy of hig youth as the great- who has| 6. £, BRENNAN PASSES AWAY EARLY TODAY Mastex Mind .of Illinois De- madracy Dies.at His Home in Chicago (Cnrllnuml trom Puge Onel at the helm, and as head of the 1llinois organization he was wel- comed to the ranks of party fac- tors by guch ategists as Tom Taggart of Ind and the lead- Hall. But for logs of a leg in an Mlinois coal mine when he was 13, Brennagn might have been un- known to polfties. “His mishap sent him to school where he pre- pared himsplf as a teacher, and when he came fo Chicago short- ly before 1900 he was on his way to political ‘emmence. He built up an fuswrance business which was one of the largest in- Chi- (cago. Not until he passed his sixtieth ‘llll‘lhlluy did. Brennan first seek an elective office, because _he found no outstanding Democrat to run for the United States Senate on a platform ad- tion. He lost, but ran so well in Chi- he carried a Demo- cratie county ticket to victory which counted heavily for the party. His first spurs in the field of national politics were won when he helped to engincer the nom- ination of James M. Cox for President at the National Demo- cratic Convention in 1920, He was in the vanguard of the sup- porters of Gov. Al Smith cf New York for the 1924 nomination, and was spokesman for the Smith camp when the deadlock with McAdoo was finally broken in tavor of John W. Davis. When critics called him a boss and charged him with bargains with Republican factions of Chi- cago, Brennan pointed with pride to his maneuvering of William E. Dever's election to the Mayoralty of Chicago in 1923 to succeed; William Hale Thompson. Although a natlye of New York, where he was born at Port Byron on May 20, 1865, Bren- nan lived in Iilinols from boy- hood. He was married and had one daughter, Mary. Enters Combination * Several " broad-gauged lieuten- ants eyed etiviously the . lcader- gulllvg{-' ath left is vacant In 19 “Riehnan's clalin_upon it, precarlots bt first, was tight- ened when he ‘entered frankly into a bipartisan combination in 1921, Ten Republican Judges of Cook County, endorsed by the Chicago HBar Association, were defeated at the primaries and Brennan in- duced them to run at the No- vember clection =~ as Democrats. With his post-primary ticket he appealed for nupport in the name of civic decency, and the ticket was eleeted. 'I‘hrnugh all his cnreer Brennan was ‘‘wringing ‘wet"—a ' descrip- tion he courted when he sought ithe United States Senatorship in 1926. He pleaded for local de- 'tormination. on the prohibition iquestion, and spondored a pro- hibition referendum in conjunc- tfon with his Senatorial cam- paign. Brennan looked back' at' the est personal factor in his success When ‘the leg of "the youthtul mule driver.in a Braldwood, 111, lcoal mine was crughod ' between two cars, and amputated on the spot without anaesthetie, Drei- nan determined to muke some- thing of himself at a sodentary (tagk. School teadhing rewarded nim with an a tendency of schobls at Jollot atd led to his vull!lul careet. Atter he had beeh 'a clork for the s.mrm ¢ ‘Stite at grh?’- g hidakb and | 0 tad Heen ! 800! ter): dom The lnfl].l‘nhee Qd-m wealth to ‘HBfenmdl fie mndeL it help Him' In ltlh- It was i a comon talé” that“he ‘turned to rivals busihess he could not handle, and obtained in return political good will. heavy man of medium height, Brennan was the personi- flcation of jollity. His contaglous Irish good human made warm frionds of inAny whp apposed his political views, and his kindness qhowed |tself to mamy in need, though Brennan always cloaked lhis beneficcnces in anonymity. George B. HBrennan was a cousin, of the Rev. John F. Hayes, 1. of thg lgeal Catholic Church. b —r—telr e ! M w. K. ér and her son Kennetl who o been visiting :lqmad ; 8t. Jobn, Bellingham, “n pfl- h? Juneau on the . 'The Kellets will unfl Nel¥ home in the Bishop / k¢ in and then only | WOMAN IS Body Is Hedge of Lawn of 1 body of Jen rs, head of th | ment of the Bradley Poly | nstitute, on the front lawn of her residence this morning. heen beaten bloodstained iron pipe near where a hedge. Sta HELD FOR OBSERVATION ¥ Ketchikan S with further ob: advices received by U. White y McLeod a charge also been filed against for ains along the sidewalk indi- cated to the struck the hind the hedge. torn from her hody. found those in the house she been when all Ed tenced Ketchikan cated in a puble Commis e MURDERED Found Behind Evanston Home 11CAGO, Eng l\ sh De of Peoria, 11l was found | She had | attacked A was found lay behind and the body police she had be he walked in front of and then dragged be- Her clothes were A milkman According . to must have the library house, the body. returning attacked, A from McLeod, a by > oF ik Marshal's office, charged larceny, is being held for rvation, cording to used | PARIS—Rayen is being | by many of the important design- ers for warm weather frocks in an effort to make their prices more tempting. The collar and tod, The advi *|cuffs are in beige tweed to har- will be investigated on|monize with the bar design in| of insanity which has|the rayon in a soft shade of him and /brewn. The skirt wraps around addiction |coat fashion, and there is a sug- smith was sen- [ gestion of an underslip. The flow- 20 days in the|ecrs are brown. for being intoxi ., — place, by U. S.|LET Almquist Press Your Suit ioner Kehe |We, call and deliyer. Phone 528 to s jail ’ DO YOU CllOOS(’ ? Do you know that you can choose “Chic Ankle” (pointed heel) or Square Heelin Holeproof Silk Stock- ings? Well you can! And Hole- proof colours are all created by Lucile’s very own handsat Paris.Only Holeproof can offer this exclusive Lucile service. Don’t forget. . . pointed or square heelsallin Lucile colours, and of course each has the famous ExToe umforcunen( for longer wear. /;’olgaroof /{asza'y 1107 Broad:eay, New York, REPRESENTATIVE BEN C. DELZELLE JUNEAU You Dine in Comfort You Sleep in Comfort on thcm\ Olympian because it rolls on roller bearings QYou llecfnon coil sprlnl latut system of vu'm You are thru mountains by electric safety block signals, more efigcdve than any other block sighal in the west. You are uu;fying menls by courteous employees. W b.oM‘u. tickets ard reservations may be seswred thru R. E.CARSON MA.&:.PM‘ snd Union The MILWAUKEE ROAD MWMM SEE US FOR FIREPROOF SHINGLES PLASTER BOARD' CORRUGATED IRON ROOFING PITCH ROOFING PAPERS DOORS and WINDOW LOCKS and HINGES WINDOW GLASS Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. HARDWARE and UNDERTAKING Frrr oo s ot e et bt re e ’Kann s‘ Store | 223 SEWARD STREET Capital Electric Company Near Cold Storage Building Electrical Contracting HOUSE AND BOAT WIRING WESTINGHOUSE MAZDA LAMPS PHONE 416 Why Can the Peaches? We don't elaim to be sheiks, but figure that we know a real peach when we see one, You'll find all our canned fruits and vege- tables the best procurable, or else our buyer will find himself on the shelf along with the rest of the canned goods, in a hurry. And our service counts. CALIFORNIA GROCERY Free delivery three times daily PHONE 478 “Best in Everything” FRYE-BRUHN COMPANY QUALITY MEATS Mayflower Butter and Eggs Featuring Frye’s Delicious Hams and Bacons FIIONE 38 D e e e P | THE ARCADE CAFE Try Our Special $1.00 Dinner Visit our Frigidaire-Equipped Fountain. You are cordially invited to come In and inspect Juneau's newest and classiest cafe. MARY YOUNG, Proprietor. NORTHERN HOTEL ROOMS—50 cents per night and up; $3.00 per week and up. Public shower and tub baths 50 cents. Ray 0il Burner in operation——Hot water day and night. Rooms $12.00 per month and up—steam heated. PEARL—GLO A washable_ pearl-like finish for Woodwork, Furniture, Walls, Ceiling or any interior purpose. At JUNEAU PAINT STORE CHICKEN DINNER AUK BAY INN SANDWICHES 12 Miles, Out COFFEE . LUMBER MILLS, IN¢

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