The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 7, 1929, Page 2

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Summery Fashions jor warmer days DRESSES of correct modes, developed in sheer georgette, chiffon, silk crepes and flat crepe. Print- { | ed patterns, tuckings, flares, pleatings, new sleeves | and An unsual collection of : 15.00. touches. priced {rom $6.95 to trimming smart dresses, {COATS. favored tail from to $60.00. A u models st distinetive colleetion of the most beautifully made in every de- to trimming, priced from $22.50 lining MILLINERY. clothes. Bright are hats for bright summer I.:t»a recent arrivals and de- Weather Comlmom As Recorded ln l]lc U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning 4 p. m. today: Fair tonight, Wednesday cloudy; moderate southerly winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barom. Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 p. m. yest'y .. 3020 63 24 NE 5 Clear 4 a. m. today 30.32 4“4 69 NE 2 Clear Noon today .30.34 58 31 E a5 Clear — CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS A TODAY s Highest 8 pra. | YLow 8am. Sam. Precip. _8am. Stations— tomp. temp. | _temp. temp. Velocity 241 *—Less U Barrow % 28 28 16 28 Nome 38 34 | 32 34 Bethel 46 42 | 36 40 Fort Yukon 60 54 | 26 42 Tanana . 60 56 | 28 44 Eagle 60 54 26 48 st. Paul B » | un B Dutch Harbor 40 40 30 42 Kodiak 52 48 | 40 40 24 Trace Rain Cordova 58 50 | 38 46 0 Clear Juneau . 67 63 | 3 44 2 0 Clear Ketchikan 60 — 44 — 6 0 Cldy Prince Rupert . 60 48 42 2 0 0 Cldy Edmonton . . 5% 50 | 28 30 . 0 Clear Seattle 56 56 g S TN Cldy Portland 58 68 46 46 0 Cldy San Francisco 04 60 50 50 0 Clear NOTE—Ovservatio:» ai St. Paul, Dutch Harbor, Kodizk, Juneau, Prince Rupert, Ldmonton, Seattle, Portland and San F:iansco are wade at 4 a. and 4 n. m,, Juneau time. R The pressure is lowest in southern Southwestern Alaska, and is high in Northern and Eastern Al and southward to California. Moderate rains have fallen in Bering Sea and rain commenced this morning at Kodiak. Clear weather prevails in the Interior, on Prince William Sound and in South- edstern Alaska except the extreme southern portion which is cloudy. Temperatures have risen in extrem: Northern Alaska and in this vi- cinity with little change elsewhere. Bering Sea and fa]fiz_lq AID MINDED DOG FIGHTS TO FLY Pal, a German police dog with a record of 65 flying hours, and his master, E. A. Moore of Detroit. _|spection of the Food, Drug and In- " | sectitude Administration of the De- _|tie Station, will have charge of the ' |tle July G enroute to Seward. From ; in|Sound canneries. DETROIT, May 7—A dog with what might be determined a de- cided “aviation complex” is the pos- session and almost inseparable com- without food for two days because Moore took off without him. e e —— DR. BUNNELL LEAVES FOR SOUTH TODAY very lineate wlvanced mill Pri it ‘ll‘l-(' ed l}‘nu; B. M. Behrends Co., Juneau’s Leading Department Store inery trend. Inc. panion of E. A. Moore, A Detroit | commercial aviator. | police hound two years old, and The dog named Pal, is 8 German| pDr. C. E. Bunnell, President of ‘the Alaska Asgricultural College and has 65 flying hours on his record. 8chool of Mines, who has been in At Packard field here, whence most | juneau for the past seven weeks of Moore’s local take offs are made, | for the purpose of securing ap- it is said to be almost impossible {propriations for the College from to keep Pal out of the cockpit of |the Territorial Legislature, leaves his master’s plane. tonight on the steamer Aleutian for He is willing to fight anybody |Seattle on business. ~He expects who seeks to keep him out, andito be there a week or ten days if Moore does get away without|after which he will return to his the dog it is only after some one|home in Fairbanks. bhas held him back by main force. N SR Y OO T Then the dog refuses to eat until| We SPECIALIZE on Tinting and Moore comes back. Framing Piclures. Cali in and see On one recent occasion Pal went |our work. Coates Studios. JOIN HELEN IN TENNIS INVASION . Marjorle Morrlll of Massachucetts *(left) and Edith Cross of California as they sailed from New York. They will join Helen Wills Jn_Paris for an invasion of European tennis courts. the Meuse must irredeemably com- P‘hfi s‘Y‘ German | promise our situation. The Crown m Saved Verdun‘muco and General Von Mudra it 4 | were right.” ¥ (Continued lrom Page One) “Our salvaticr,” he adds, *“was | probably in the choice by the Ger- man High Command of Von Mudra | himself to the chief of the general iwmch preceded his removal, that staff, but Von Falkenhayn ordered the Prince to go on with the of- fensive. i “How many men were condemn- ed to death by that brutal de- cision!” Petain exclaims. “The Crown Prince was asked to renew attempts that were doomed to fail- ure.” In his defense of brother officers who were accused of having neg- lected the defense of Verdun, Mar- shal Petain recalls that General Joffre was severely criticized by Radicals and Secialists in parlia- ment who favored his retirement in favor of General Sarradl. Deputies declared, in the secret | session of the Chamber of Deputies Joffre had failed to see that proper fleld works were constructed be- fore Verdun, that General Langle de Cary, Commander of the armies of the Center, had overlooked that important matter and that General Herr, commanding at Verdun, had not even executed the meager or: ders given by Joffre and transmit- ted through Langle de Cary. Pe- tain writes: “I verified the absurdity of those allegations as soon as 1 entered |upon my duties there. The com- {mander of the fortified ion of Verdun had given proof of remark- iable clear sightedness, and, under the wise impulsion of General Langle de Cary, met under the best conditions the attack they had both forseen.” The German successes at the out- set of the battle are attributed by Petain principally to their superi- Make your Mother happy on Moth- er’s Day—bring a smile to her faee by presenting her with some token of your love and admiration. We have a tremendous variety of Mother’s Day Greeting Cards to choose from‘somethmg for every taste. Our stock offers a wide selee- tion from which to chogse an ap- propriate and desirable gift for Mother. ority in artillery which he cal- culates to have been about two to one, . Try a HOT TAMALE after the of 1914, that is to say by going o 5| bout, the envelopment of the fort- |lo command on the right bank in- ! on both sides of the river./stead of the left bank.” @fl Von Mudra, who com-| Petain says that after the tre- H manded the corps west of the mendous drive the Germans made | we agreed with the Crown April 9 the Crown Prince saw the e A uselessness of further efforts to take Verdun. He so expressed |show. Juneau Ice Cream Perlors. Gift Shop adv. ——— “[INSPECTION OF SALMON PLANTS WILL BE MADE Commissioner Flory An- nounces Plans for Inspec- tion Local Canneries NOTICE American Beauty Parlor OPENS FOR BUSINESS MONDAY May 6th Plans for the annual sanitary in- partment of Agriculture were an- nounced today by Charles H. Flory, We Feature LEON OIL. METHODS and EUGENE PERMANENT WAVES "|Alaska Commissioner for the De- partment. Two and possibly three inspe¢tors will take part in the work which is largely connected with salmon canning in the Ter-| ritorial waters. A. M. Hanson, Chief of the Scat- MRS. JACK WILSON, Prop. pection. . He plans to leave Seat- | there he will proced to Anchorage, | visiting plans there and then cover Cook Inlet points on one of the| patrol ships maintained by the U.| S. Bureau of Fisheries. All the month of July will be speut in Cook Inlet and Prince William | WHILE THEY LAST AUl Typeuwriters at a Big REDUCTION SOME AS LOW AS $5.00 | Guaranteed Machines Mr. Hansen will then come to, |Southeastern Alaska. William H |Spauling, it is expected, will ac-; company him from Seattle to Ju- neau, and cover Southeastern Al-| aska points, being aided by Mr.! Hansen after the latter completes his work to the Westward. A third spector may be a member of thc party. In visiting local plants the U. S Bureau of Fisheries will place’ its I vessels at the disposal of the in- spectors. And the Forest Service boats will be available should the need arise. — e L] {Hungarian Tells Of 15 Years in Russian Prisons J. B. Burford & Co. “Qur Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” (Continued i : Page One) few can stomach complete the fare. “Each prisoner must cut down twelve trees a day. Failure to ac- complish this task is severely pun- | ished and once when I failed I was thrown naked into the icy sea. But this was a blessing in disguise for I developed pneumonia and had to be sent to a hospital at Kem.” Prisoners find life so intolerable on the island that many of them |court serious hurts in order to be sent to the hospital. L SEED POTATOES A selected snuipment of Haines, Alaska Seed Potatoes. Seattle Fruit and Produce Ce. —adv, WHY NOT LET US put your name.on. qur coal lisk it is certainly good coal. We deljver fresh dressee poultry every day. Our eggs are the largest amnd freshest that the hens produce. We carry a complete Hne of Poultry and Fox Peeda. i And etur ti er servioe—: well you can’t beat it D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 Lester D. Henderson Second edition, revised and enlarged, now ready for distribution, s Up-to-date facts regarding Alaska--- Its Scenic Features, Geography, His- tory and Government. At IN TWO BINDINGS--- Regular paper cover, $1.00, postpaid. De luxe edition, $2.00, postpaid. ORDER FROM Emp;re Printing Company IUNEAU ALASKA Or Your Local Dealer - S——

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