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e Ww MEN’S FINELY TAILORED CLOTHING FOR SPRING At Reasonable Prices Gff with OLD — On with the NEW! Spring season reminds men of the need for new clothes, new o and look well dressed and in tune-with the seascn. Here you will find a plentiful variety of new Michaels Sterns Suits and Top Coats in complete variety and fashions that a favorites in men’s wi Featuring Suits With 2 Pair{ Pants As Low As $35.00 Each ALSO NEW SPRING EVERYTHING B. M. Behrends Co., Inc.} The utfits that make you feel and in weaves, colorings S & ppreet re decreed to be popular ‘1,,,,,,,‘, GES R ; , & ear for Spring 1930. > R FOOTWEAR——————NEW STETSGN HA IS NEW HERE FOR YOUR SELECTION Juneau’s Leading Department Store Lefefmenfyerrallssosenflrmsenlymroenfyon = oasens u YOUNGEST SON OF CLADSTONE PASSES AWAY Died Early This Morning —Was Prominent in British Politics LONDON, Marcu 6.-—~The Rl.flf'\; Honorable Viscount Herbert John Gladstone, youngest son of William E. Gladstone, of the Victorian era and fame, dled at 2:30 o'clock this morning a3 the result of en illness which began with an attack of bronchitis in January. He was'long prominent in poli- tics and the councils of the Lib- eral Part; was Home Secretary from 1905 to 1910 and he then took ! what his Commoner father twice refused, a seat in the House of rds, He was born in 1854 —— .- 0., DRY LAWS | ARE DEFENDED " WASHINGTON, March 6-—Ap- pearing In rapid succession before the House Judiclary Committee, farmer and manufacturer, endors- ed the Eighteenth Amendment to- day. Representative Burtness, of North Dakota, said the working men in his State were drinking milk in- stead of Liquor and the agricultural gonditions had not been aggravated Ly the dry laws. He sald the State has prospered under 41 years of Prohibition. Patrick Callahan, of Loulsville, Kentucky, Chairman of the Cen- tral Cooperative Committee on Pro- hibition Enforcement, asserted that Prohibition had saved more lives | [Rev. Bauer of the Congregatior Church in Douglas officiating. ALASKA MINING i Many floral offerings beautified I socal chapel for the services, which were held at 2:30 p. m. D | under the auspices of the Dcuglas | Eagles. * Fall bearers were James rls0 Mike Pus Tom She k ;I)u[un. Harold Posi and Ji | -t —— i —_ All Branches Gain in Sta- bility in Prosperity, | SCHOOL COSTS 70 GTY LSS | St SR {ment in the transportation ficld, Mr. Stewart pointed out. This has been a material factor in better- iment of the mining industry. More {and improved roads and trails, the airplane for transportation, have jall played an important part. 0 rations of Public chools Here Cost $500 Less than in 1916 (This is the third of a series of articles on the Juneau Pub- lic School system. The fourth will appear in tomorrow's issuz of The Empire. Ed. Note.) ing groups big factor. Where formerly they were uninterested in a meré pros- 1pcct on which little or no develop- | The operation of the Juneau! M0t Work had been done, today Public Schools actually costs the,they ere willing fo take the raw city of Juneau less today than it Prospect and expend funds in ex- dAid in 1916. 'This s due to the!Ploratory work. —He cited the Alas- Territory now refunding 70% of the k¥ Juneau's entry into the Taku cost of operating the local schools|River fleld, and the Kennecott Cop- | to the city of Juneau. The total|Per Corporation’s development of a amount of funds supplied by the COPPer prospect on the Chittitu ity to operate the Jned]l schosls|River as outstanding examples of has not increased with the in- this altered viewpoint. il creased enrollment, but is ectually| A similar development policy is less now than it was in 1916. Thm;rhuractmy ic of the Fairbanks EX= conclusions arc evidet when the Ploration Company, which is' now total funds received from the clty}engfl!L‘d in exploring A new area over a long period of years is com- [on the Kobuck River, he said. pared. These figures do net in- Prospectors’ Ald Helps clude the redemption of or interest! The financial assistance extended {on bonded indebtedness. This fail- |to prospectors by the Territory has {ure to find it necessary to increase [als0 been a factor in mineral de- the school costs to the city is due velopment, Mr. Stewart asserted. ito the refunds received from the, The Kobuk placer strike was made | Territory, which have increased to|by a man who was able to explore a maximum of $40,000 per year. the district only on account of the When taxes were raised in Ju-|financial aid he received from the neau a yeam ago, many supposed Territory. Chick Nelson, discoverer {this was necessary to take care of of the Chititu prospect now being |the enlarged school. This, however, | developed by the Kennecott, was was no the case, as will be seen |8lso financed from the same source. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARC | “That Jesus may be Lifted Up,”| | A changed attifude by large min- |; was seen as another| from the accompanying figures. {And there have keen other pros- H 6, 1930. 5 . WORLD'S DAY | Daily Crossaword Puzsl | | | i ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 12 Princely house | 1 l,fn-ern'ed 13. At no time: i . Orert. A AR T 3 ! . Yale BE uBsERVEB 1. Seandinavian ;E 28 Falrles |7 mea 25, Recompenses length 26. Winged 15 Start (M| 27, Pertalning to 16. t’JJvly‘u:.lnL R :ln anatomieal ] L 3 ssue [ | 1. Pl the first Forenoon and Afternoon| ' it 4 E (LIA] 25 Comtidens ot S 5 F | 18, Vrepare h | Sessions Will Be Held |1 rattea: L P O[N Here | g, heraldey ; L A T|E Apeient Romay ere Tomorrow | peonan » T N . otdeini i | 35. Spirit In The World’s Day of Prayer for ’.‘,.'.':.dfr“.',';"?r"'e E :2 [ % 5{'-'";'““':" |Missions will be observed in Ju-| . forty thieves EID 2 H=1 8, volliwogs T | neau tcmorrow. Officers and com- At na not |AINJEWEBIS[E AT AlLIE B e s wilis mittecs of the Juneau Interdenomi- 30 Litted '~ IWETD[S PR TI|AMIE BET E|D] 4 Col aeaim national Council of Church women >* (o “0o!"€ ¢ o will have charge of the one day |3 Away: Scot. g1, Amerienn 1 Sort s The B0 neross |session which will' begin at 10:30, °* Dfomonnetog 2. Feeviousts ¥ Gy of the 4% Commotion [oclock in the Northern Light Pres- | 1. Rosters 85, Copks in un . Uive tree 42, Rigsnonds byterian Chureh. i1l Euronean ineh g, A son of Adam 4. Make preclous 5% Welght: comb. | The following program will be| 42 Pertaining to {'.!','.:l‘,":‘;_ )’""" 3. Bloek given at the forenoos sernosH % 1 54. Festival v e forenoon and afigrncon | & lf,,:,':‘ " 56. The binekthorn S ons. Prayer by Capt. E. K. Tobin. 7. Adherent of | Song Barvice. e the Zoroastrinn Devotional, led by Mrs. T. W religion White. 50, Fruit skins | tters and stories of Misrion- | aries read by Mrs. Harry Allen and | Mrs Philip Herriman. | Business meeting. During this| |hour a constitution for the Coun-| jeil will be read and adopted and | | new officers will be elected. | Luncheon served in the church dining roém by a committee of wo—‘; men from the various churches. will be the subject of the afternoon | program which will begin at 1:30) Ronald Lister. | the Power of Prelude, by Mrs, Song. “All Hall Jesus’ Name.”" Scripture Reading. Song, “Crown Him With Many Crowns.” “Jesus, the Desire of All Na- tions,” Mrs. C. E. Personeus. Antiphonal Duet, “Art Thou Weary, Art Thou Languid,” Mrs. C. P. Jenne and Mrs. C. E. Skipste. “Jesus Answers All Man's Needs,” Mrs. Frank Price. | Song, “I Hear the Voice of Je-! sus ‘Say,” vocal solo, Mrs. C. E. Skipste. A i “Let Us Give Thanks,” Mrs. Philip Herriman. o Offerfory, Mrs. Ronald Lister. “Let Us Confess,” Mrs. Harry Stonehouse. Violin Bolo, Mrs. John Osburn. Vocal lo, “There is a Green Hill Far Away,” Mrs. C. E. Jenn2, “He Must Be Lifted Higher,” Mrs. | % = 54 52 | but also an extens campaign 0f| | publicity and propaganda that fin-! |ally succeeded in popularizing the fenormous expenditures the plan m»j tailed. : Von Tirpitz rank of Vice was raised to the \dmiral in 1890 :\nll‘ E. K. Tobin, four years later was made an Ad- Vocal Bolo, “My Task,” Mr. BUCk-| a)” "He was knighted in 19001 ingham. ,lend in 1917 was decorated with “A call to Prayer and WILNeSs" |10 raor of the Black le, the Mrs. C. C. Saunders. inighest honor to be cor d in| Song, “Lrad On, O, King Eter- nal” Our World Family Prayer. Mmperial Germany. His final honor |came in 1911 when he was given the rank of Grand Admiral. ! Mizpah Benediction. | After his resignation from the Mrs. Ronald Lister will be 'the | nayy von Tirpitz continued his , pianist. | public activities a Reichstag | Depnty of the Nationalist Party, of which he was made honorary chair- iman. As such he was one of those who persuaded the unwilling Mar- shal von Hindenburg to become a candidate fcr the Presidency of . —re PASSES AWAY & s " 3 s o7 "3 Admiral von Tirpitz spent his last J Years at Feldafing, on the shores IN BA v A RlAiof Starnberger Lake in Bavaria. There he lived in a comparatively small villa, surrounded by a gar- den, and entertained visitors from all parts of the world. The aged Admiral was the father of two sons and two daughters, born of his happy marriage to Marie Lipke. ., A T.HADLEY DIES MAKING WORLD TRIP President Emeritus of Yale Passes Away in Japan ~—Pneumonia Cause Father, of (E;;—many's Sub-; marine Warfare Dies as Result Bronchitis (Continued from Page One) submarine warfare that the United States értered the great struggle and ‘tt wis for the same.reason that many other hitherto neutral tiatlon ‘abindoned their “hands of " ‘poliey and threw their influ- ence with the Allies. : “That situation was sald to have been anticipated by the forther Kaiser and some of his closést advisers, yet the will of von Tirpitz prevailed. In the end there og- |curred a rupture between the Kal- ser and his naval chief and finally the resignation of the latter, . Son of Lawyer (Continued 1rom Page One) WENEE JdEN Mountain 1a HIt bard: Spread loosely It torm 57, 85, o great & colloq sale 61. Exclamation 1. Sound of & 62. Drunkard bullet 63. Neck searf suced as a teacher in the col- ege, Mr. Hadley developed his use- ful capacity for carrying on differ- ent lines of important work at the game time. In 1890-91 he was acting professor of political econ- omy in the Sheffield Scientmc} School; in 1892-95 he served as; dean of the Graduate School; in 1885-87 he as commissioner of Labor Statistics of the State of| Connecticut and in this capacity published two reports that gitracted | wide attention and established his | reputation as a statistician and as a student of the labor problem.| From 1887 to 1889 he was associate | editor of the Railroad Gazette of| New York, having special charge | | of the department of foreign rall-‘ roads. As President of the University, Mr. Hadley found it necessary to give up his regular courses of in- struction but he delivered annually the matriculation and haccalauraatcl addresses. He also found time to| prepare several courses of special lectures, such as the Kennedy lec- tures before the New York School of Fhilanthropy, the Yale lectures on the Responsibilities of Citizen- ship, and the lectures delivered at the University of Berlin in 1807- 08. President Hadley married Miss Helen Harrison Morris, daughter of the late Governor Luzon B. Morris, of New Haven, June 30, 1891. They had three children. { JUNIOR PROM IS 4 TOMORROW NIGHT The Junior Prom will be the big | social event tomorrow night. The gymnasium, where the event will be held, has been tastily and prettily decorated by the hard-working Ju- niors. They anticipate a large crowd at this annual event of the High School class. | Alfred P. Friedrich von Tirpitz was born March 19, 1849, at Kues- trin, the son of a local lawyer. The father, unimpressed with the prospects for his son's future, plac- €d him on a 1iaval training ship when he ‘'was 18. From that time, 1885, He was valedictorian of his class and took Wcolsey and Bristed Scholarships. He was the re- cipient of Winthrop prizes for “students most thoroughly ac- quainted with the Greek and Latin than America’ lost in the World War. WOOFTER IN JUNEAU; GOING TO FAIRBANKS Clarente J. Woofter, Represen- talive in the last Alaska Terri- torial Legislature from the Second ' Division, and who re-enlisted in the United States Signal Corps, ar- * yived in Juneau on the Margnita ‘ from Skagway. Mr. Woofter has been operator - in - charge at the “fynn Canal metropolis for several months during the leave of Sidney | ‘Helms. - " ‘Mr. Woofter has been transferred - to Fairbanks and it is understood he will be operator-in-charge of the radio station at that point. . SERVICES ARE HELD ‘ Charles Hoxie, 67, who passed “at his home her early Tues- | Amount of funds recelved from Pects discovered which later may ;city for operation of school: idsvolop into something worthwhile. { 1915-16 .$20,600 { If the Prospectors’ Aid Fund con- | 1919-20 10107 {tinues to bring such results, it will 1920-21 . . 16,205 {more than justify its continuance, i 1921-22 ... . 19,668 | he said. { 1922-23 . 18,112 | Reviews Recent Strike ! 1923-24 16,440 ! Mr. Stewart reveiwed the reports ¥ 1924-25 19,650 |from the Poorman pldcer strike. | 1025-26 21,303 |Pay has been found on two creeks, | 1926-27 19,907 l\vou and Beaver, running $8 per 1927-28 . 18572 square foot on bedrock on the | 1928-29 22715 former and between $45 and $50 1 192930 20,100 fon the latter, according to letters |received by him from the district. | All reports recelved have been fav- |orable. If further developments continue to be encouraging, Mr. Stewart added, an engineer will be sent there from Fairbanks to make {an official report. | In conelusion, Mr. Stewart said |it was the aim of his office to |build up an organization that would (keep in close toueh with all branches of the mining industry, aid prospeclors and operators solve | their problems, assemble accurate data on all prospects and the var- |until his retirément, von Tirpitz |devoted his entire active life to the navy. % At 20 he was a Lieutenant and four years later a Commander. His edvancement continued in rapld suceession. By 1800 he had become Chief of Staff of the Baltic sta- {tion of the higher command of ‘the navy. The next year he was given command of the cruiser divisien in the east Asiatic waters. It was in 1807 that von Tirpitz also assumed the post of Secretary of State for the Imperial Nawy, |serving as such until his rupture {with the Kaiser in 1016, when he resigned. Although the creal of the pre-war German navy gef- erally is attributed to the former Kaiser, it really was von Tirpitz 'who was the instigator and orgah- lizer of it. r For Enlarged Navy In his capacity as Secretary. of State for the Navy, the Grand Ad- miral acted as sponsor for the ‘im- portant navy bills of 1898, 1900, 1807 and 1912 providing for the lous fields, and make authentic in- formation available to responsible individuals and companies desiring such knowledge, enlargement of the German figet and he successfully put them through the Reichstag. He mnot only conducted the important par- tion [8n his work in the field of the poets, “the Clarke prize for the solution of astronomical problems, and one of the Townsend prizes for English composition. ! Studies in Europe He studied political seience in| New Haven for a year after his, graduation in 1876 and continued his studies for the next two years at the University of Berlin. On his return from Europe, in the au-| tumn of 1879, he was made a tu- tor in Yale College, giving instruc- tion in Greek, logic, German and Roman law. His tutorship ended in 1883, and about that time be- 1 history and science of railroad transportation, in which he ac-) complished considerable important | work, and raised himself to thel position of an acknowledged au- thority. From 1883 to 1886 he Wwas university lecturer on rallrond: administration. In the latter years he was appointed professor of po- litical science in the graduate de- partment, and in 1801 he was transferred to the chair of political economy in Yale college, which he held till his election to the presi- deney in 1899, liamentary advocacy of the bills,| . During these years of marked, §. - WOMEN OF Moocscheart Legion will meet to- night at 8 o'clock in Moose Hall. AGNES GRIGG, Recorder. —————— Dell E. Sheriri, saueau’s piang uner. Hotel Gastineau, —ady —adv. Juvenile Dresses - ; D e Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Rureau Forecast for Juncau and vicinity, bes*~uing & p. m. today: Rain tonight and Friday; moderate southeasterly winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocy Weathe 4 p. m. yest'y 29.76 31 29 SE 9 Snow 4 a. m. today 29.57 35 90 E 15 Rain Noon tfoday . 29.48 36 91 SE 6 Rain "CABLE AND RADIO REFORTS ——VESTERDAY ] TODAY Highest 4pm. | Low 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. Stations— temp. temp. | emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weather Barrow T an | <3¢ -8) 0, 4 Clear i Neme : 6 4 -6 -6 3 0 Clear Bethel 12 10 -6 -6 10 0 Clear Fort Yukon ... -4 -10 =20 -14 s 0 Cldy Tanana 3 - | -2 -14 -8 - 0 Cldy | Eagle 6 2 4 -4 — .02 Snow 8t. Paul .. 32 30 28 28 4 .01 Pt Cldy Dutch Harbor ... 32 = 2 30 - 26 Cldy Kodiak 40 28 34 3¢ 20 .08 Cldy Cordova . 40 36 | 32 34 12 22 Raing Juneau 8% .8 31 B 15 46 Rain’ Ketchikan . 42 38 34 38 8 06 Rain Prinee Rupert ... 44 42 36 40 0 [ Cldy Edmonton 30 24 | 8 8 g 0 Clear Seattle 43 42 | 38 38 * 0 Cldy Portland . 52 50 | 42 42 4 0 Clay San Francisco 58 52 50 50 4 15 Cldy *—Less than 10 miles. R SOy D R VSIS ¥ 0 WY TR S et NOTE—Observations at Berrow, Fort Yukon, Tanana and Eagle are made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m., Juneau time. A trough of low pressure extends from the Western Aleutian Islands to West Central Canada, with its lowest part in the Gulf of Alaska. The pressure is high from the Pacific States westward and slightly above normal near the Arctic Coast. Light to moderate rain and snow has fallen in Southern Alaska and the upper Yu- |kon Valley, with cloudy weather in the Interior and clear weather on the Bering Sea and Arctic coasts. Temperatures haves risen in extreme Eastern and Northern Alaska and fallen elsewhere, Heywood-Wakefield New 1930 Carriages NOW IN STOCK Drop in and see them A Qualicy Seat on Every Wheer~ Every carriage sold with a guarantee Juneau-Young Hardware Company Do Y our Repairing Now LUMBER-—CEMENT-—SHINGLES DOORS—WINDOWS PLASTERBOARD—FRAMES QUALITY and SERVICE Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. Lumber for Every Purpose PHONE 358 Congoleum Rugs 1930 Patterns of Linoleum s Thomas fl:rd%re Co. F rye-B;'ulin Company Featuring Frye'’s De. licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 - STATIONERY, OFFICE EQUIPMENT, Typewriter Supplies and Commercial Printing Exclusive Dealers Underwood Typewriters Geo. M. Simpkins Co. e 1 . o o o B i