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Spring Hats in Clever SPORTS STYLES Chic, dressy millinery expressly designed for sports wear or with a tailored suit or dress. Their becomingness is unques- tioned. Straw—felt with straw brim. $7.00 and $10.00 B. M. BEHRENDS (0., inc. Juneau’s Leadinyg Department Store rard e M e e raid a tribute to W. G. Smith, the |length the pledges he'had made present Treasurer and candidate on |when he first indde ‘tHe race for the Rustgard ticket, but failed to|Delegate to Congtess:im-1908, and mention Mr. Knight, who presided |asserted in each 1nst&8hes that the at his meeting in Anchorage and pledge had been fulfiMed. whose name appears on the sample | Support ' for -Hoover ballots of the Wickersham »Paul; He pledged himself o support combination. | President Hoover and “his policies | Urges Full Vote | That he ‘has ‘ho" intention, if el- Judge Wickersham prefaced his|ected, of picking up-Delegate Suth- remarks with a urgent appeal for|erland’s fight with 'thé.. adminis« everyone to go to the polls next|tration. he indicated, saying: Tuesday and vote for some can-| uy porrow o ‘man's quafrels. ‘T didate, preferably, he added, him-|,m not golng to Washington o) self and those with whom he Was | so)ow up any quarrel made by my| Nomination Speaks Last associated in this campaign. He predecessor or anybody else. 1 am | pointed out the interest every citi- | Night at the Palace j |going to try to persuade Pnasldentl In a two-hour speech delivered |Zen should take in political affairs| goover this Territory needs his at the Palace Theatre last night,|a¢ the only guarantee of good gov- |assistance, and try to point out Judge James Wickersham, pleaded |€rnment | to him in friendly co-operation how his own case and that of the ticket | Recalling that he had resided in |that assistance may be administ- associated with him, except for|Alaska 30 years, he speaker de- ered in the Territory, and do every- Frank L. Knight, Anchorage candi-|clared “In that time we have ac- |thing T can, in & most friendly date for Treasurer, on the Wicker- | complished wonders” That in 30|way, to secure his co-operation in sham-Paul-Steel slate. He went|years a great work has been done.|the development of the Territory: into details over his platform and | Dating from the time he came to| He next pledged his efforts or specifically pledged himself to work |Alaska, he averred, “I have seen |the part of the Pacific<Yiikon High- for the accomplishment of all ths|if grow wonderfull adding “Al- |way at some length, declaring 'in planks set up therein. aska has prospered and gone for-|his judgment it" would be more He commended specifically W. L.}v‘nrd more in the last 30 years valuable to the Tertitory than @ Paul, Indian leader, and candidate than the Atlantic Coast of the|1aflrobd as it would bring more PAUL COMBINE DEFENDED HERE BY WICKERSHAM Candidate for Delegate | fctually delivered. |that Mr. Steel was using his edi- | tection st Ketchikan, Seward and | Qordova, as being the three places where work needed to be done to | pravide for the safety of small E .Full Terfitorial Government | { Tacitly admitting that his own | Alaska is inadequate, he declared: “1 beliéve in a full Territorial form of government. I believe in! | giving the people of this Territory | | all the powers of government that | |the earlier Territories had; and it |is for that reason I say to you | now, I.pledge you I will do every- {thing I can to bring to the people | of the Territory the control of our‘ fisheries, control of our fur-bear- | ing animals, and control of our game and everything in that na- ture.” He dealt at some length on the | fisheries, declaring that he was “opposed to the monopoly of the fisheries by any, group of men or corporations.” He pledged himself to obtain apprapriations for public buildings at Ketchikan, Anchorage and Fair- ‘" banks, and funds for a bridge across Gastineau Channel connecting Ju- neay and Douglas, for a boat chan<’ nel’ across Mendenhall Bar, con- !strugtion of @n insane asylum in Alaska, continued appropriations for the Alaska Railroad and road and highway work in the Territory. | Credit for Capital | Mr. Wickersham took credit for the location of the capital of Al- aska in Juneau and for the capito! building now being constructed. He drew the bill, he said, in 1913 puthorizing the building of the |capitpl here and carrying an ap- propriation of $200,000, charging then Gov. Clark with having it re- duced from $250,000 to the lesse- {sum in order that the Governc |might get $50,000 for the Gover |nors’ Mansion., Empire’s New Service He, as usual, made a point of bringing The Empire into the cam pafgn. Facetiously he commente on the reports in The Empire cov ering the speeches delivered by hi opponent, John Rustgard, on a re cent tour of Southeast Alaska, in timating one such report appearec before the speech in question wa: He defended the citizenship o Candidate Steel, giving dates o Bteel's firrivals in Alaska from Se- attle: and his departures to Seattl from Alaska, saying in the interim torfal talent in preparing for pub- licatfon and in publishing the All- ing his famnily and their home here. | ——————— Bound for a vacation W. A Steel, Senatorial candidate, | years.” thém-over | . Cash Cole, running for Auditor,| for nomination on the House ticket, United States did in its first 100 |people to t Tertitory and scatter Widet drcas. B adgee| H len] SEVEN PERSONS, seated about the dinner table in the baronial home of Dan i Parados, turned to a grim contest of make-believe—=cach attempting to “convict" the others of the hypathetical murder of their absent host. . Like a mountain avalanche, there butst out a torrent of hatreds and jealemifi,‘ i hissing, stinging, biting. Parados was loathed and despised by his business assoclates, | his secretary, servdnts, acquaintances and even by his wife., : Under his very roof, Parados” bitterest enemies “confessed” their innermoit thoughts, laid bare a dozen motives for the imaginary crime, to which nearly cvety personi.in the house became a party-suspect, A skillful “prosecutor,” himsclf a mysterious visitor to Parados _sinister domain, had barely finished the grilling, when his little drama was interrupted., The police were pounding on the door, demanding admittance. The game had become a reality. Dan Parados was dead in his library, a bullet through his heart.’ WHO 1S GUILTY? Read the answer in this unique, pulsating story of -wvenge and romance—by Charles G. Boothhis latest, distinctive _work, “MURDER AT HIGH TIDE" 1 erfi He is agent at Kennecott for| the ‘Copper River and Northwestern Railway. ! jern Railway at Chitina. in the'bound on the Northwes Btates, Mt. and Mrs. O. G. Olson,|him are Mrs. are ‘southbound on the Northwest-|four children, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1930. s RS Prays For Russians Assoclated Press Photo Pope Pius XI kneeling at the altar in St. Peters in the Vatican City against Soviet persecution of religion. THOMAS BROWN GIVEN 15-MONTH SENTENCE Thomas Brown, convicted here vecently of robbing a Willoughby Avenue cabin, was today to 15 months at McN Isla: Penitentiary by Judge Justin Harding. He will be taken so An an early boat The jury trying the case of onrd vs. Oscar Harri, a suit in- lving the sale of a gasboat on 1 execution of judgment, today ad been out almost 24 hours and entenced nd W as still unable to agree. It was >ported unofficially the jury stood t 6 to 6. The case was given to at 4 p. m. Wednesday and at p. m. today there was no sign it a verdict being reached. LETTER WINNERS ARE GIVING HOP FRIDAY EVENING The annual J-club dance of the Juneau High School, sponsored jointly by the boys and girls who have won their letters in athletics, will be given in the High School Alaskn Review of the Cordova|Auditorium tomorrow evening. Dafly Times. 1 Miss Betty Barr r is chairman Introdated by Le Fevre |>f the committee on arrangement Judge - Wickersham was intro-|and is assisted by Henning Ber: duced by his old friend Judge|gren and Ben Messer Music w #1,.B. Te Fevre of this city! Pre-The furnished by the Moonlight ceding the address, motion plctures | serenaders. were shown. Among theme was a i - tewsreel made by Cash Cole show-| o ;. zy former the Copper River and Nor Zyvoloski and their B fice. agent of Old papers at The Emplre of- + HIGH TIDE Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S. Weather Bureau | Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, bes’~uing & p. m. today: | Cloudy, possibly shewers tomight, Friday fair; moderate east | erly winds. | LOCAL DATA | Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weathe 1 p. m. yest'y 29.86 47 84 SE 8 Sprinkling 4 a. m. today 29.86 0 98 E 2 Cldy | Noon today 29.80 50 6 s 1 Cldy ‘ OABLE AND RADIO REFORTS YESTERDAY 1 R\ ) | Highest 4pm. | Low 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. | Stations~ temp. temp. | emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weather Barrow 4 4 ] Nome 18 16 | 4 8 * 0 Clear Bethel 26 22 |- 18 TS A 0 Clear Fort Yukon 32 24 | 12 16 — 0 Clear Tanana 38 34 18 20 [/— 0 Pt Cldy Bagle 40 30 24 24 — 0 Cldy st. Paul 32 30 26 26 12 0 Clea- Dutch Harbor 42 40 Bl e - 0 Cldy Kodiak 48 44 | 33 32 - 0 Clear Cordova 44 38 | 3 40 10 204 Rain Juneau .4 4 | 38 40 2 21 Cldy |Ketchikan 48 48 B 0 40 Cldy {Prince Rupert 54 52 42 44 0 04 Pt Cldy Fdmonton 70 52 | e o 8 14 Clear Seattle 62 56 | 48 48 8 01 Pt Cldy Portland 56 56 I 80 op 4 2 Cldy San Francisco ... 62 58 | 6% &6 4 .08 Pt Cldy | *—Less than 10 miles. | NOTE.—Observations at Alaskan mainland stations, except Ju- |nean and Cordova made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. m.,, Juneau time. | The pressure is moderately low from the Gulf of Alaska to Ore- and near the middle Aleutian Islands. It gon is high over the remainder of Alaska and Yukon Territory. = Precipitation has been general in Eastern Alaska with hecvy rain at Cordova. Clear weather prevails over most of Western Alaska. Temperatures have fallen except near the eastern part of the Gulf of Alaska where | they have risen. 18,000 POUNDS OF HALIBUT SOLD HERE | Eighteen inousand pounds of | halibut sold here yesterday and today at prices of from 10 and 6.10 to 9.30 and 6 cents. San Juan paid top price on 5,000 pounds aboard the Tery, Capt. An- drew Rosnes and 10 and 6 for a similar amount on the Ida IL, Capt. John Sunderiand. | This morning New England pur- chased 8000 pounds at 930 and 6 from the Fern, Capt. John Lowell. —————— J. J. Hillard, who has been to the westward in the interests of the U. 8. Customs office here, returnec aboard the Northwestern. Traveling men arriving on the Northwestern included Frank Par- rish and Albert Wile. Leo Breuer, Commissioner of Edu- cation, returned to Juneau on the Northwestern after spending several weeks to the westward and Inter- ior. Daniels Asks 100-Year Trial of Prohibition Josephus Daniels, a veteran prohi- bitionist, whose order as Secretary of the Navy made the navy dry, charged that the Federal Govern- ment itself, and particularly some departments of the government, | ‘have failed to use the power they P to erforce prohibition. » appeared as one of the dry | witnesses before the House Judic- | jary Committee, which is consider- ing modification legislation. (International New: | Interior, passed through aboard the Northwestern. Through passengers from cluded Mrs. W. H. Lehman of Kot- " | zebue. JARMAN’S ~ Second Street A new shipment of PILLOW CASES—$1.00 each NEW SILK HOSE B — Charles G. Booth’ STARTS HMONDAY, P n DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE APRIL 28 H. L. Strong, mink farmer of the | Juneay the | westward on the Northwestern. in- | A SHORT TRUTHFUL SPEECH 1S BETTER THAIV A BOOK Fu! OF DOUBTFUL LANGUAGE b FAIR AND SQUARE, “We serve only the best foods in the politest manner at consistent prices and de- liver promptly.” ‘There is a volume of satisfaction in this terse promise corroborated by the people who grocery their homes at this shop. Quality first. You must be satisfied. SCHILLINGS COFFEE’ DEMONSTRATION Come in and try a cup SANITARY GROCERY PHONES 83—85 DANCE | | SATURDAY NIGHT A. B. Hall | 1\\4usir by the “GLOOM CHASERS” JUNEAU AMUSE- MENT CO. Morris Construction Com pany GENERAL CARPENTER WORK Phone 62 - American Beauty Shop Valentine Building PHONE 397 Special for the month of April — Safest Perfected . Method of Permanent Waving $10.00 Under New Management PHONE YOUR ORDERS TO US We will attend to them promptly. Our coal, hay, grain and transfer business is increasing daily. There’s a reason. Give us a trial order today and learn why. You Can’t Help Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER" PHONE 114 =7 A