The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 25, 1930, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1930. FOOTWEAR OF ALITY CHILDREN’! SERVICEABLE Q Shoe quality is difficult to judge, for many “made to sell at a price” look like a ifive dollar quality but they don’t wear long. They not worth even the lowest price. AR FOOTWEAR insures thor- They look better and longer; we're sure of it are BRAND satisfaction, your oug we we're 80, sure that we guarantee them to give absolute sat- isfaction. Here are some real bargains m oxford and shoes—— at $1.75 pair Sizes 814 to 1114 9 Sizes 12 to MEN’S DEPENDABLE WORK SHOES SPECIAL AT $3.95 PAIR Sizes 6 to 11 Plack and Brown —BUY A NEW TOP COAT AT 1-4 THEIR REGULAR PRICE B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Jun MEN cau’s Leading Department Store is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. ! Willlam E. Britt. Mrs. Lanz is now School Counsel- ed to here of ti ccompany Mr. Ski afternoon local company's PRBMiNENT CANADIAN ! CANNERYMAN ARRIVES; back me ACCOMPAN!ES SKINNER in this di He plans to rej lor of the Los Angeles Public} the Prine mnday nigh and also coadjutator in| G at Ketchi return to h books side issue. Glossg \n home in Vancouve in such capacity for | s Pish g - > he past six years. Mr. Lanz is| principal of one of the schools in ! e last night for ft that ship on its a e and rema G. W. Skinner Alaska Pacific Mr. G MRS. LANZ IS ON VISIT IN JUNEAU .. Lanz, for sevel Juneau H the time her husband w intendent of the Juncau P ols, is a visitor Junean g hicd with her nd old friends. her: Los the Mrs. the next Tuesday morning - > geles Sthool system. Lanz will return southe on | Princess Louise leaving hete | W. Harris of Yes Bay, Fred Jeh- | sen and C. Johnson of‘Seattle, afd Mrs. George W. Jones and Miss K. | Jones of Beverly Hills, Cal, are registered at the Gastineau. trip Whil Skinner, he went to S| ceaplane Wrangell and we All Aboard for Taku Harbor Sunday July 27, 1930 | THE ALMA LEAVES JUNEAU AT 9 A. M. AND RETURNS TO JUNEAU BY 6 P..M. § ROUND TRIP FARE Adults, $2.00; Children under 12 years, $1.00 CHEAPER THAN STAYING AT HOME MUSIC BY JUNEAU CITY BAND The Berries are ripe and the Fishing is fine — Bring Your Lunch — We'll Supply the Coffee—BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW /SOUIRRELS ARE 125,000 POUNDS Salmon s Bulk of Reseiptd There were 17,000 pounds of salmon | |fish were sold to the New England | {Fish Company on bids of 9.85 cents | BEING PLANTED ON 2 ISLANDS for Fur-Bearing Ani- mals in Future Sixty squirrels are being planted this week on Baranof and,Chicha- | gof Islands by Wardén Frank Du- fresne of the Alaska Game Commis- | sion, under the Terrltorial game stocking program adopted by the | Alaska. Legislature several yoare| ago. The animals were captured | near Juncau on Glacier Highway. The squirrels are expected to fur- | nish a supply of food for fur-bear- ing animals on the two islands. After they have populated the fav- orable areas sufficiently, marten will be planted on both islands by the Territory. There are but few squirrels and no marten on them at present. The program calls for first building up | a food source and then stocking | with the fur-bearers. Several years) f ago, Ranger George Peterson of the| United States Forest Service re- leased a pair of squirrels at Sitka. | ‘These have propagated and spread throughout the entire Sitka dis- trict, The success of this experi- ment resulted in the present stock- ing which is on a larger scale than the original Sitka planting. R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R RO R R RO R R RO, Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S, Weather Bureau Forecast for Juneam and victnity, baw'~ning 4 p. m. today: Cloudy tonight and Saturday; gentle variable winds. LOCAL DATA “3 Time Barometer Temp. Humlidity Wind Velocify Weathe 4 p. m. yest'y 30.05 50 86 s : ¢ Cudy 4 a.’'m. today 3010 48 9 s 3 Cldy ! Noon today . 30.12 54 81 S 2 Cldy CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS ' YESTERDAY i TODAY | Highest 4pm. | Low 4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. . Stations~ temp. temp. | emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weathier X { Barrow .42 38 34 48 * 0 r p 5] Nome 50 48 4 46 10 o0 Bethel 62 60 44 50 4 0 ) Orchid, A/Z.W Fort Yukon 68 64 54, D o ks 0 Clear! erpe de, e}WW" Tanana 64 60 38% Bk RS PUl Clean 5 Fairbanks 64 64 ‘ . Evening diess ands |eagie 1 6 ps M ZlE TS Famd ,AW M &t. Paul . 52 50 42 44 12 0 Foggv o Dutch Harbor ... 56 50 46 4% — Trace PtOMY rinto_a | Kodiak 5 56 B N =% Cldy 5 E ;}ordova .. 64 60 4: 60 4 Trace Cldy, uneaun .51 50 47 48 3 .08 Cliv, %‘tfl/wm | Ketchikan . 54 52 42, 44 4 34 Pt Cldy Y Prince Rupert ... 58 52 48 50 0 108 cldy | Fdmonton . 82 68 46 48 8 20 Rain X Seattle 66 66 54 56 6 0 Cldyt sy { Portland .. % 74 50 50 1 0 Clear W San Francisco . 64 62 52 54 0 Clay A | Spokane 8 84 58 58 L 0 Cldv Vancouver, B. C. 76 70 | . 48 48 ¥ 0 Cleaj *—Less than 10 miles. NOTE.—Observations at Alaskan malnlaha stations, except Ju- nean, Cordova and Fairbanks are made at 8 a. m. and 8 p. mi Juneau time. ¥ H The pressure is moderately high in the Northeastern Pacifi Ocean, the Aleutian Islands and from Southeastern Alaska to North- €rn California, and is moderately low in Central Canada and nean Bering Strait. Light to moderate showers fell in Southernh Alaskd and in the central Interior, followed by clearing in the latter dis} trict. Temperature changes were slight except in the extreme north where it is considerably warmer. ! g n) should be turned under for fert{jiger says Peter Schwartz of Waukesha, | Wisconsin, “alfalfa king.” ——-o——— IODINE IN FEED TESTED ' the Princess Charlotte this morn- ing after having spent a few days here. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred McCann, of New York City, have been guests of Mr. and Mrs, Gilbert Skinner OF FISH COME INPORT TODAY - They couldn’t understand how could be driving the car with r husband in the back seat. Mrs. told the natives that women in the United States drive from both front and reat ses crowds of excited people around her automobile ioned her. —Halibut 'Brings 9.58 and 6 | | | fwcxlty-(ivv\ thousand pounds of fish were unloaded here today. and 8,000 of hallbut The Celtic, Capt. Henry Moy, brought 10,000 pounds of salmon. The Anna H., chartered by Henry Moy and captained by Martin Holst, | Jr., The fish on both boats was for the Alaska Pacific Salmon Corporation. | The Fremont, Olaf Winther, un-| loaded 8,000 pounds of halibut. The What you practice in mdkiug CuStard is always practiced in roasting HILLS BROS CoFFEE CusTARD BAKED in small dishes cooks more cvenly than when cooked in large pans. Since Hills Bros. roast their coffee @ few pounds % 4 at @ time instead of in bulk, ever! American First Woman betry is roasted evenly. This con’: To Drive Car in Soviet | tinuous process — Controlled | Roasting — produces a flavor no other coffee has. and 6 cents a pound. The steaniship Admiral Rogers took to Seattle today for the San Juan Fish Company 51 boxes of frozen salmon and for Melchoir, Armstrong, Dessau and Company'| three tierces of salmon. | TASHKENT, Soviet Russia, July 25.—Mrs, Arthur Powell Davis, wife of the California irrigation engi- neer, has won the distinction of being the first American woman w"’:f"" from the drive an automobile in Soviet Rus- jm;""l Ve sla, J pack. Ljaul; When she drove her car through L""’Lfl‘:’;:’ ::: the streets of Tashkent where many A{;b Py g women still wear the veil and are kept to the strict seclusion of the © 1930 YOUR SAVING DAY BETTER GOODS “QUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT” Trupak Apricots, No. 214 tins, 2 for ......70¢ Trupak Apricots, No. 1 tin, 3 for . 55¢ Trupak Grapefruit, No. 2 tins, 3 for ... 55¢ Trupak Peaches, No. 214 tins, 2 for ... 60c Palace Peaches, No. 214 tins, 2 for . 40¢ Palace Apricots, No. 214 tins, 2 for ... 40¢ Trupak Main Corn, No. 2 tins, 3 for .. 55¢ Trupak Small Sugar Peas, No. 2 tins, Palace Sugar Peas, No. 2 tins, 3 for 55¢ Palace Cut Beans, No, 2 tin, 3 for . 55¢ Palace Sweet Corn, No, 2 tins, 3 for ... 45¢ Palace Golden Corn, No. 2 tins, 3 for __55¢ Trupak : Rosebud Beets, 2 for H. B. Sliced Beets, fancy, 2 for .. BEST QUALITY—BEST PRICES You Are Losing Out If You Do Not Try Them NORTHERN SALES AGENCY W. W. BATCHELLER Juneau Ferry and Navigation Co. AU, ALASKA—PHONE 6 \ GUY SMITH’S, DOUGLAS, Phone 181 On Second Street Corner of Main " |for several days. Mr. McCann is proprietor of the -Alfred McCann Laborities. He conducts scientific researches into food values and is in charge of the food department of the New York Mirror. He also broadcasts daily food talks from STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Forty calves and 1200 chickens are on feed at Pennsylvania state college to determine the value of iodine in livestock feeding. Experiments | with 25 cows, 40 pigs, and 180 lambs have been concluded. Tacoma Reservists Get Black Bear ‘Cub As Their Mascot ® As a result of the recent @ |gne of the large New York radio e i ® visit of the Naval Reservists ® |stations. [ LARGEST BULL SALE ® t{o Juneau, the Tacoma con- e et oo ® tingent will have a black e & i | bear cub as a mascot, it was e | RAILROAD OFFERS CORN PRIzE| CALGARY, Alberta—Five hun- $ |dred and thirty-one bulls selling ® made known today at local e 2 agly for-a total of $115475, or ‘. headquarters of the Alaska | RALEIGH, N. C—The Atlantic Vot §217 each, ab Ciflgary - |e Game Commission. o |coast line railroad has offered four |2P0U $2 4 & _yl le Under authority of the e|cash prizes totalling $260 for the Stituted the largest bull sale in |® Secretaty of Agriculture, A. e |highest corn yields on five acres |NOrth America. ie H. Middleton, Commander of e }of land. | i- the Tacoma organization, o e e | Support for needy persons over {® obtained a black bear cub e |TURIN Pl ' INTO RTILIZER |70 years of age through old age |® from Frances Synder, at o —_— pension laws is provided by Mas- |® Douglas and it has been e MILWAUKEE, Wis. — Quack sachusetts, California, Nevada, Mon- 1- shipped to Tacoma. It will e |grass roots dug out and dried, tana, Wisconsin and New York. ,® accompany the reservists e — — 5 - = {® from there on their weekly |® cruises on an Eagle boat 'e used for that purpose. Be- 1® tween cruises it will be cared “O for by the Point Defiance Park at Tacoma. . || WHO'S WHO AND WHERE p— TRAVEL BY AIR FLIGHTS TO ANY POINT DESIRED John BSve, local prospector, re- turned yesterday to Tulsequah and {from there will resume prospecting started early this Spring. He cam2 here several days ago for supplies. K. MacMillan, J. Kelly, C. Car- :scn and A. McDonald, who have iprocpected in the Dease Lake coun- try, left for Vancouver, B. C., on - A ALASKAWASHINGTON-AIRWAY S FOR RESERVATIONS—Hangar Phone, 29 tineau, Phone 10. A. B. HAYES, Agent ; Gas- Quality Printing Why buy ordinary printing when you can get Quality Printing at the same identical cost. Before you give out that next print- ing job you have in-mind, get our esti- mate — Be convinced that you can buy Quality Printing from us at the cost of ordi- nary printing. We can print anything from an ordi- nary post card to a large Broadside. Phone 374 Empire Printing Co.

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