The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 3, 1929, Page 2

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" A PRt - THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1929. Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S, Weather Burean THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, :llotlwr Bear Is |Broken Hearted ; Forecast for Juneam and vicinity, bes Rain tonight and Friday; fresh southeast to east winds. ning 4 p. m. today: QUALITY LUMBER | LIVINGSTON, Montana, October 3—If a bear can YOCAL DATA : feel grief and be hea Ti B: tel . idity Wind Velocity Weather % =3 A\ / > hearted, one such bear is vxz : 4 p. x:.“ yest'y m;;':: J T::‘D "“"."v‘fimly :ll Pl::'. Y Rain SPR[,CIL, HENIIJOCI\ flnd Yellowstone Park. o4 a. m. today 293¢ 51 L E 15 Cldy L ‘ SR s e v e &« s e CEDAR i Because our collection of the new Coats for Autumn cpring e same wey a5 o et B AND BADIO WEYORTS \ e firghs . . - : FratmEe i b The Rt Bas Biried vecandh Highest 4pm. | Low 4cm. 4am. Precip. 4am. Clear and Common Grades and Winer contains so many styles, we say with rea- ¥\, "5ar"Sdims St $lstations— temp. temp, | emp. tcrp, Velocity 24 brs. Weather (S : ; il l ) s % f i I cm»(l‘ and climbed a pole sup- e |Barrow 36 | Trace Snow urfaced anc ouch | ~ sonable certainty, “You'll find the coat you want g o portne 2,230 volt power o |Nome ;fi ‘ 0 2t oy surracea « g i | I P r ° e ; i . l® the wire and was clectro- e|Fort Yukon 50 0 Clear - St | T here.” A few moments will suffice to show vou how { s cicea Gl e o Clear Prompt Service | & % % e Yesterday the second cub |Eagle 54 01 . ’ i R & I I y limbed le, touch t. Paul 46 e 0 i splendidly we have provided all types of coats'for §|; fimteds pol iouched the @it Feul ... 48 i M 6 S i ¢ ¢ |e “The mother bear, after o c o 50 3 p H SOV ~cas Stree ~oate 2SSy coats, Sspor e whining at the spot f | 54 2 i $ every occ asion. treet coats, dres a0 2 } | ® while, went slowly !?ackflirntz : :' 51 15 :‘2’(“ © the timber. o! B = - 6 326 coats. All are here and each has been selected for &! {orin: gilig o g e o SeE ’ coats. All are here : " e gl g e e g 0 b o Juneau Lumber Mills, inc. . 2 B 2 : . v 2o & le i O 56 54 12 0 Cudy | ? 5 S 2ss---its quality and tailoring. Correct in §| - e F v 5 y 5 Dot rifen i FOUR FLIERS [N=see % & | 2 & o & &%) PHONE 355 ‘ color, pattern, trimming and BricE. | : | g e KB | Lumber For Every Purpose A I R E A R L Y F 0 R NOTE—Observations at Barrow, Fort Yukon, Tanana and Eagle & | ! 2 are made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m,, Juncau time. E ssure centinues low thrcughcut Al nd high from the - FLlGHT' SEATTLE‘ an Islands to the Pacific Statc The m is central south (= . - ———— — <e ('E the Gulf of Alaska with' a b 3t reading of 2850 inches. |/ === ! l ¥ §§ ’ f{l.un.: have been general in Soui‘rfi?:]n Alaska unrl):'crrv)c heavy irrlnc :Tm H L N 5 Southeast. Clear ‘4nd much colder weather prevails in the Interior | Leaves Sltkav Alaska, at|with little’ change in temperature in other districts, sl \ 5 ] ge . 3 5:43 oClock This - - f Fill up those EMPTY Lamp In many and varied themes. Each model reveals Morning for South [iciipiasce whieh wil be | 1axpy RETURNS FROM TRIP | ' f Y i Y A | ‘The Leader Store is mow in the ; gl Sockets with o some feature distinctly individual that sets it apart (Continued wouw: Pags One) dcting_procoss. New. fxtures| 0 Sl i , g & W b TN ———jare helng installed, new lighting ureau of Fisheris 4 : v variety in th b i red {and heating systems put in, new yesterday from an in- 9 A from the ordinary variety. o etk of B twin mojorma e e R b e Edison Mazda Lamps Young Commander jgcods are arriving on almost every ing the| . " RAERS e o Al Scmyon Shestakov is the com- |boat patrol boat Scoter, | A continual tlow of new arrivals keeps our dress §.oece i it moam 2o F B made thrao| R : , rings the Tussians oo to Newly e ol fishing, il o I'he Standard of Comparison 2 g 2p -nQ 4 2 Q arfe A r ity. stakov, 31 years| 1WOQ entering pleas ol B sclection ever fresh with the smartest of the newer @|vok civ. shesiakor. a1 vears| Textle Mill R; > United States. Gomn:| ! A e ots s Court at Haines. | S O { i b : ; , air that has brought him recogni. , @ | Keep a few on hand for L: conceptions. The fabrics, patterns and colorings in- { tion generaiy as the ace of russian| - == el Ol ) i Avthtors? ot N, Norta Carolina, Oct. . m‘ razos Hotel, heritage n.; C]ner{rencv use. { . The others of the crew are Philip,—The number of dead in the iex-{the old 1 in Houston, Tex., is > J clude all that is new and preferred this season. | Bolotov, ‘the second pilot; Boris tile mill sirike riots increased to d to make room for a | : [Bterlingov, navigatar, and ‘Dmaltey foUr t6des Wh e desh of two : " ! & \l \\vi\\ys ’]‘H I‘: l‘:‘.‘vv THH\(;S F]RST” 'F“/i:fv.;.:'zicch?,:;i' unknown covntry | Wounds. —Several investigations of E NG CLAIM LOCA- S > of Sibaria dlods "toithe top of t1.c |the rioting are underway. TION NOTICES AT THE EMPIE world, then out over the Pacific by |way of the Aleutian Islands to Alaska was the route followed by | |the Russians in leisurely insta ments. | Flight Is Sponsored The flight is sponsored by the; Russian Osoaviakhim, (Society for | the Promotion of Aviation). It is| an all Russian enterprise, the plane |being designed by A. N. Tupolev IWMWMWM-MM |and with the exceptioh of its mo- s A e T e —-—————= |tors was built in Soviet plants. | Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Douglas—Pi.one 18 B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store Juneau—Phone 6 [He was elected to the Reichstag GREAT GERMAN {in 1907 as a candidate of that party | came a devoted follower of , the party's leader and I $ Ten years later, upon ! Bassermann's death, Stresemann BERLIN succeeded to his post as head of the party. Gustav Strescmann Dies| Adhcrent of Monarchy Sud Ger- | With the outbreak of the World 5U('denly TOda-v it |War in 1914 Stresimann, in cop- many's lLlOyd George' " |trast to his later career as Forelgn chairmenship of the German Peo- | ple's Party. He was marrled and the father of two sons. country was entitléd. The Dawes plan, the security pact with France and the Locarno treaties were ap- proached in order and the will'of Stresemann prevailed. His leadership was tested to the extreme in his plan to have Ger- many enter the League of Nations. in 1918 he formed and assumed |In Germany there was little regardlbetween'Russia and the American for the efficacy of the league; in Allied circles there was much dis- trust as to the honesty of Ger- many's pacific intentions. The For- elgn Minister pursued his course unswervingly and by September, 1926, the election of Germany as a A duplicate of the one wrecked incar Ohita, it is powered by twin | 600 horse power motors. It carries a radio with a good range. ‘While primarily a good will triv, | Commander Shestakov has inti- mated he and his men may be the path finders for an airline in 1931 west coast to serve as a continua- |tion of the Trans-Siberian rail-| way service. B ANGIENT TOWN IFavorite modes in new [*all millinery are here in | Minister, became an outstanding {member of the 1 e became a 8 B ¢ ino arrayv < (Continued from Page One) exponent of the annexationist idea |fact. Stresmann Headed the Ger- { - i b:deomiige array of c'u] B 2o il Tadle ...‘amil continued long after the revo- |man delegation to the league, and b y | ors and shapes . . . with ; (lution to be an adherent of the|on September 17 had the famous y i rariety London conference that led to the |yonarchist principle. Thoiry breakfast with Briand, then| an. exceptional variety adoption of the Dawes plan and a year later, in Februray, 1925, sug- gested the idea of a security pact with France. He won over Dr. Hans buther, then Chancellor, to the advantages of a non-aggression pact, and with him went to London to help draft the famous Locarno treaties | In the confusion that came after | Foreign Minister of France. |Germany's breakdown he asserted| The German Foreign Minister (lis political leadérship by his out- |fupther established himself as a |spoken opposition to the scheme |statesman of intérnational calibre to merge the Naticnal Liberals and {in March, 1927, when he presided Progre into one party. Rath- |at the meeting of the League Coun- er than sanction the merger, and |cil with tact and skill. Affable, ap- in o to dispel any ideal of |proachable and willing to talk, he silent approval by remaihing inac- {became a favotite with the news- It was he who secured Germany's agrec! t to the renunciation of Alsace and Lorraine and finally, he negotiated and steered Germany's entrance into the League of Na- ticns. ¢ parties, the new organi- All these cvents, of tremendous zation had a right and ‘a left wing importance in the reestablishment with widely diverging views. Thc of cconomic order in Germany, party was recruited largely fron were accomplished by Stresemann the ranks of “big business.” long before he was 50 years of Stresemann began to aftract in- age. (lernaticnal attention when in Aug- German “Lloyd George? ‘ust, 1923, he was chosen Chancei- For his ability to change his lor to suceced Withelm Cuno. It political creed and adapt himself was then that he greatly relievec to the new order of things, brought the tenseness of the situation in about by changing conditions, he the Ruhr Valley by substituting often was called “the Lloyd George his policy of reconciliation for that of Germany.” How completely he of passive resistence, which had «cculd change inthe course of events been inaugurated by his predeces- was indicated by his new attitude sor. tive, he created the German Peo- ple's Party g over it was no easy like all other German - toward the republic. The displeasure which this move | responde; line through the town and use the | Galy. As late as 1923, Stresemann clung caused the Nationalists was further of I[)h?d;«x,;:i!&y ot{;fcep“" it second floor of the old hotel as a to his belief in a “Volkskaisertum” aggravated when the new Chan- In his leisure mo’ments Dr. waiting room. s 8'00 . —ha mm;flrc&y headeld byT ]n Emperor cellor named three Socialists in his | 3ircsemann found diversion in the Ly 9.50 chesen by the people. ree years Cabinct, ting '“It was impos- q | I -, Jater, addressing a convention of sible to T iizzx Germany wfi’th- (;rfi:e;l: L‘:lr;:lnN;polemdm‘g T' l“ AMN BECOMES ! 14.00 German students, he asserted his cut Social Democrats.” For ng the best o ill.:nte | MANAGER OF LEADER | ! 19.00 willingness “to protect the republic this he was severely criticized His knowledgl: of tg:e DEPARTMENT STORE | H . i G Sy b tionalists. men and thelr writings was| - - i 22.00 Stresemann, twice Chancellor and ¢ only as a matter of|; d By the '® ng with 3 N LS | i five times Forelgn Minister, was poiitical necessity that Stresemann |y he dfiloted "4 oz T. L. Allen, for several years head " 30.00 born in Berlin May 10, 1878, the took the Chancellorship, for it W' 79 ey of the Dry Goods Department of ! 50.00 son of a restaurant keeper. He erally known that his ambition s +JGoldstein’s Emporium, has accepted g showed promise as a boy and his was to become Foreign Minister NOTICE a position as manager of the Lead- ! | 65.00 father, at considerable sacrifice, That came to pass in November, er Department Store, it was an-| 100.00 - sent him through the universitics 1923 when he acceptdd that port. of Berlin and Leipsic. He special- folio under Chaneellor Marx, who ized in ecomomics and political sycceeded him. baper correspondens assigned to the ¥ S ‘cague. The crowning recognition of his policies of peace and concilia Ame in December, 1926, when with “oreign Ministér Briand of France md Austen Chamberlain of Great Britain he shared the Nobel Peace rize ‘of that “year: Socially, \Dr, Stresemann was the most active of the German states- nen of his time. He entertainéd ienerously at his official residence, where he was assisted by his beau- iful and accomplished wife. He vas a frequent attendant at the heatre, opera, athletic events and nolitical entertainments. Only the ressure of important business kept him away, from the Friday after- a0on teas given to the foreign cor- Martinique School of the > has removed its studio from Moose Hall and will be perin- ly located in the A. B. Hall. After leaving college in 1901 he| assistant to the General! International Program With the long-looked-for oppor- s will be held at the new FLODD WATERS | San Marcial Is Buried Und-| er Silt—Workers Walk Into Second Stories SAN MARCIAL, New Mexico, Oct. | 3—This ancient village of the 1Spanish Conquistadores, has lost o | jeentury ‘old battle with flood! | | | | The Rio Grande River town is rapidly being reduced to a mere flag station on the Sante Fe rail- Iroad. A few adobe houses which with- stood the August and September floods, are buried under silt. Relief workers walk without dif ficulty into the upper stories. The layer of mud has raised the town from eight to ten feet. ‘The streets are dry, choked wiih sunbaked sand. It is understood the railroad in- tended to reconstruct one main nounced today by George Brothers, | recently taking over the Leader. He will have full charge of the re-| arrangement of stocks, buying, etc | “We consider ourselves very for-| ansuring exclusive indi- viduality to every pur- chaser. Smart and so- phisticated, our hats will please the eye while their moderateness will win the approval of the purse—for every occas ion — for every mood— for every woman — we have just the proper hat. In velvets and felts, tail- ored and dress, helmet, turban and brimmed — = styles. $6.50 1o $15.00 ! See our new complete line of Baby Carriages Juneau-Young Hardwgre Co. f ———— RETAIL PRICES PIPE Effective January 15, 1929 Wholesale Prices on Application e location as usual, also private in- tunate in 6btaining Mr. Allen | i of the Association of Ger- tunity at hand, Stresemann plunged | stryction. Telephone 143. ady, | Thomas George, senlor member of | RICE & AHLERS CO nan Chocolate Manufacturers. Two into his international program with | P i .5 - Y the firm, said today. “He is not | 3 ’ 7 WU e 3% later he was chosep General lhe idea of eliminating those ob-| ¢ only high qualified by years of gen- m(ary of the League of Saxon stacies that were retarding the re-| LODE MINING CLAIM LOCA- | experience in the field to man- Industrialists. establishment of economic order and | TION NOTICES AT THE EMPIRE |age the business, but his connection ~ From this vantage point he made of placing Germany in the posi-| ———e+—i—= "7 lyith Goldstein's Emporium has giv- | % Jump into politics, affiliating tion among the nations of the! Commercial job printing ac THelen him a wide knowledge of local | ; % the National Liberal Party ‘wurld to' which he ‘believed his Fmpire, TR - |conditions and ‘demands and an ‘ PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL Juneau, Alaska b “We tell you in advance what job will cost”

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