The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 16, 1930, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

P——_ R — THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1930. pril howers Fashions ASTER COAT VALI 0 PRE-E Here is an oustanding collection from which to choose your New models, correét in every detail and presenting the most popular coat The straight-line coat is belted, has an new coat. fabr even hem, collar unfurred, stitched and tailored in rich tweeds. $19.75, $29.75, $42.50 NEW GLOVES for Easter are absolutely essential, we will show you the correct styles and prices in kid, silk and fabric gloves. 3.50, $1.75, $1.25 NEW HANDBAGS and UMBRELLAS are necessary accessories for the Our collections at reasonable prices will fill the bill. Easter ensemble. New Suits ' @ ~In Many ol Smart St vyles for Easter The favored styles are so varied that it is impossible to describe the many new MICHAELS STERNS SUITS and TOP COATS. Priced as low as $35.00 with 2 pair pants. Come in and look at the complete showing of STAR BRAND SHOES for the whole family, . Behrends Co., Ine. Juneau's Leading Department Store | Charles Mofret, sheepman of Un¢ |alaska, is making a business trip | to the States on the Yukon. | Mrs. Everew vLasner, whose name |sprung into prominence two year: |ego as the winner of the Nenana |ice pool, is on her way to Seattle on the Yukon. With her is her |mother, Mrs. J. Benson. Their l‘home is in Latouche. i On their way to Seattle and other points on the Outside on a vacation tour, Mr. and Mrs. 8. A. Baker and three children arp 2board the Yukon. He is with the Bureau of Fisheries at Cordova. Charles Simonstad, mining man is aboard the Yukon from Cor- dova. H Mrs. A. A. Hall and young son |are southbound on the Yukon from | their home in Cordova. ‘' " Among those leaving on the Yuy- kon was Charles Hawkesworth, who |15 making a business trip to Se- |attle. 1 Mrs. William Garster Jeft Junean cn the Yukon on her way to Ket- chikan for a visit. After spending several days in Juneau and winning his fight in the American Leglon gmoker last chikan is returning home on the Yukon. : ‘Wendell Dawson, with the Zeller- bach Paper Company's power in- vestigation force in Alaska, who bas been on & trip to outlying Saturday, Mickey Taylor of Ket-' Weather Conditions, As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Rureau Forecast for Juneaw and vielnity, bew’~ving 4 p. m. today: ! Falr tonight and Thursday: gentle variable winds LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocily Weathe {4 p. m. yest'y 20.93 43 41 s 3 Pt. Cldy {4 a. m. today 29.98 30 79 NW 3 Clear {Noon today 30.05 47 50 8 6 Cilear | i 1 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS | YESTERDAY ] TODAY Highest 4pam. | Low 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am ‘i_tauonb temp. temp. | ‘emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weather ! Barrow 14 8 1Mz 2. @ 0, P Cidy INome ... 24 24 | 20 24 4 0 Foggy | Bethel 30 26 | fE20 - 24 4 0 Fort Yukon . 32 30 | 2 16 ™ 0 Tanana 44 38 ww¥eE30 30 ' '— Trace Eagle 42 30 SR e ) 0 St. Paul 36 36 esqd 8y . 0 Dutch Harbor 40 38 [ 88 = 0 Kodiak 2 4 | 3 38 — 0 Cordova 46 42 i Y s . 0 Juneau ELR - | 2 30 3 Trace Ketchikan 4 4 |- & 3B 0 .30 | Prince Rupert 2 42 R L 0 30 Edmonton s 83 S R 4 £8 Seattle 50 48 lomed2 4 4 0 Portland 56 B2 | 44 46 4 01 iSan Francisco ... 64 60 [.>i55 “B2 . 0 *—Less than 10 miles. NOTE.—Observations at Alasker mainland stations, except Ju- nean and Cordova made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m., Juneau time | The pressure is moderately high over Alaska, British Columbia, the Pacific States and the Northeastern Pacific Ocean except for a moderate low area about midway between the Pacific Hawaii. Precipitation has occurred from Southeastern I Western Oregon. The weather is clear over nearly all of ¢! Alaska and cloudy in the. gestern portion. Temperatures have risen over most of the Territory. - Executives of Giant Merger JOHN WINTHROP ° ] W. ALDRICH. Several figures stand ont in the mierger that has brought together the Chase National Bank, the Equitable Trust Company and the Interstate Trust Company, New York, and combined them into the | largest bank in the world, with resources of nearly $3,000,000,000. efmong the important figures of the gigantic merger are Albert H. iggin, Winthrop W. Aldrich and John McHugh, who will be execu- tives of the world’s largest bank, DAY BEDS—BEDS—SPRINGS »_\lAA\’I’TRESSES Day Beds—Beds—Springs—Mattresses g Complete Stock at Reasonable Prices JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO. Iz JOHNSTON’S Edith Mayer, daughter of Louis Mayer, movie production king, _recently became the bride of William Goetz, young motion picture execu. tive, at Los Angel The wedding party is shown, left to right: Louis Mayer, Edith, Rabbi Edgar Magnin, who performed the ceremony, and Goetz, the groom. WHO'S WHO AND WHERE I Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T. Kubon of Fairbanks are bound for Seattle aboard the Yukon. He is owner | {of a drug store in the Interior a |city. Y W. Bayne, formerly of| Through passengers on the Yu- and now practizing dentistry | kon include Mr. and Mrs. R. J. . Fairbanks, was an arrival on Hannum and daughter, Geraldine. i Yukon. He is accompanied by |of Seward. #s. Bavne. Frank Dorbandt, prominent Al- “Traveling men arriving on the|askan aviator, accompanied by Mrs. ¥ukon included H. B. Crewson, | Dorbandt, visited with friends while Albert Wile, Oscar R. Hart and J.|the Yukon was in port. They are " J ' Meherin. - Jbooked for Seattle. Ry districts, returned in time to board | the Yukon for Ketchikan. g To visitt with her sister and brother-in-law in' Skagway, Mrs. Leonard Holmquist left on the Admiral Rogers. She will be absent about one week. " W. W. Batcheller, loeal commer- cial broker, is making the trip to Skagway on the Admiral Rogers. . | Arrivals on the Northwestern ine- cluded William Strong, Taku River transportation and mining man, who was called south a short ti ago by the illness of his wife, naw well on the road to recovery. s The Keaton brothers, Ted, Bob and N. T., popular baseball players here, came north on the Nerthwests ern, ‘CANDY BUY THE BEST . . Fresh from Factory , ALASKA BLOOMS WILL BE SHOWN AT FAIR IN CAL ! In a recent Sunday issue of the !San Francisco Examiner appears {the following under a date line of Sacramento: “Flowers from Alaska may sound to the average Californian like cnow from the Sahara but proof of the fact that some of the finest blossoms in the world grow in e most northern possessio: will be given at the " California State Fair this year. “State Fair directors announced today that an Alaskan floral ex- hibie will be brought here by air- plane for the exposition period, | August 30 through September 7. “Mrs. Frank Suffecool of Skag- way, Alaska, and formerly of Sac- ramento, is in charge of the plan |and intends to contribute dahlias, sweet peas, gladiolas, asters and other flowers from her own .garden Dr. Louise Heilbron of Sacra- mento, past president of the Na- tive Daughters of the Golden West, is co-operating in arrangements.| “The Alaska flowers, according ‘o | present plans, will be entered in competition with blossoms from the San Francisco Bay regiog, the/ Sacramento Valley and other sec-| | tions of California which contribute fo make the State Fair’s annual flower show one of the most color-| {ful and varied displays in the This is William “Wild Bill” Weightmian, who became one of America’s most notorious spendthrifts after inheriting part of the Weightman fortunes and served in the World War as an aviator, with his wife who is aiding him in his proposed flight across the Atlantic so that he may vindicate his former wild reputation which he acquired through squandering his vast inheritance. (Lower) The plane which he purchased for the flight is a Fokker cabin type. He will be accompanied by Captain Charles Sharpe, noted balloonist. (International Newsreel) | world. | “The northern “blossom plan:"‘ is expected to take off in Alaske {the midnight before the exposition | opens, arriving in Sacramento the | next - afternoon, with one stop in | Seattle.” J. M. HARMON HERE | TO OPEN OFFICES. J. M. Harmon, representative of |the West Coast Life Insurance Company, who expects to lo with an office in Juneau, was an| terday aboard the arrival here y Admiral Rog | He has been with the company | in Seattle for some time and w | recently selected to come to thel| Territory. Later, he said, a man- {ager from the West Coast LI | will come here and arrangement will be made to open offices | other parts of Alaska. At present | his concern is represented in sev- al cities in Southeast Al Sheet Metal | Oil Tanks | Gas Tanks Fox Feed Pans Smoke Stacks Stove Pipe Canopys Down Spouts Septic Tanks Air Pipe Yukon Stoves Pipe Furnaces Pipeless Furnaces Silby Tent Heaters RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what job will cost” and WHAT a Feeling! WHEN you look at a last years’ suit and wonder how in the world you're going to make it serviceable this Spring — and you send it to The Alaska Laun- dry—and it comes back spic and span—incredibly New—oh, boy — “Ain’t it a grrr-and and glo-r-r-ious feeling?” We Call For and Deliver ALASKA LANNDRY PHONE 15 American - Beauty Shop Valentine Building PHONE 397 Special for the month of April — Safest Perfected Method of || Permanent Waving $10.00 Under New Management Morris Construction Company GENERAL CARPENTER WORK Phone 62 MINUTES WITH A Royal AND THE REST OF THE DAY IS YOURS Alaska Electrie Light & Power Company JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 DEPENDABLE 24-HOUR ELECTRIC SERVICE

Other pages from this issue: