The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 16, 1930, Page 8

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A b N Y IO AR ALBERT BROWN LEAVING HERE IN SHORT TIME Schwabacher Re presenta- tive to Transfer to Seattle Territory A year tive pany ). was made few days K ric new him on a trip at once to will headquarte proce next s headqua Brown expects to I au about October 10. He wi e wher July. ters here. ve Ju- join e she H'l'l‘ made | since last Bro dence here ret the ." removal. ! AT THE HOTEL. tineaun F. Kreinsch A. Nornda, Al- bert Brown, Mrs. Anna Dahl, G. M. | Wabash and Bertha Weston, Peters- | burg; Sam Baker and Chet John son, Seattle; Roy Jones and H. L Colemn Ketchikan; Leo E. Oster- man ku Inlet Alaskan J. H. Lunn and Fred Anderson,| Chichagof; Frank Bragel and E. I Hayes, Ketchikan. Zynda F. W. Lind, Seattle; P. Myer: Fred Chan and 8. Chong, 'Xfl\k‘l; Harbor, e S Fresh 1 Shipment MANNING COFFEE | TODAY GEORGE | BROTHERS PHONES 92— Fast Deliveries e A S e 95 Five “Tomorrow's Styles Today” Dresses Featuring models for the large woman— Made in regular and to size 50. Priced from | 312.50 up “Juneaw’s Own Store” {trict | way afte iway from the BOB WILL COME BACK, SAY BEAUTY EXPERTS . ) 16 Ld ‘ . o e |o . 1 e convention o . Women g .| |e the bob o le o . . . . . ol . . o . . ! ; i 1 BEING MADE ON TW(] PROJECTS »w Roads at Ketchikan' and Wrangell Will Be Completed This Fal Excellent progress is bein on road projects near Ke and Wrs and work on them will be compl during the current season, it wa: aid today by M. D. Williams, Dis- Engineer, United es Bu- reau of Public Roads, who retur here last night on the tender Hi nspecting routes at tho: Petersburg doing fine w ge probably points and “The contractors splendid progress, ma and should complete their work be-| fore said In widening the Ward Cove sec- tion of the end of the season,” h Tongass Highway at Ket- a 16-foot standard, the ruction Company i a crew of 40 men. It am shovels, five truck The proje Surfa WHL“ employing has two s compressors, etc. three miles long be done with crushed Upon completion it ill 1 be an excellent piece of highway,” Mr Williams said. The work is about 60 per cent finished J. H. Stock, contractor, has also launched work on the Ward Cove- Mud Bay extension of Tongass| | Highway which is about four miles! sion of Wri town of V of the Office of the s c Shoemaker Ba industrial school at will be finished this Fall, Mr. Wil-| liams added. This contract is held | by the Seims-Spokane company. It| will be a d road, | |surfaced with gravel. Work on the job is & 75 per cent complete. s 38 ] a hand| labor project let out on station contract. About 20 men are em- ! ployed. TR LA A L DILL \\I-l'“ IS NEWES' Sept. 16.—Dill weed | used in the manufacture of pickles is the newest farm crop in Missis- | ROXIE, Miss., sippi. Allen Whitehead, Roxie farmer, planted an acre of dill weed this year and realized a net profit of $110.19. Cultivation and fertiliza- tion methods used were similar to those for cotton, The acre pro-| duced four tons of dried weed. Experiments conducted in the y agricultural experts show adapted to new crop inj land well the of the Lnuv quumuw | Official Hostess | Of the Dominion Miss Mildred Bennett, sisters of ~ the Honorable R. B. Bennett, is the First Lady of the Dominion by reason of the bachelerhood of her brother, the Prime Minister. Miss Bennett, one of the most charming women of Canada, Prime Minister Bennett's official bostess at all functions. (Intersational Newaresl) | |ago Maude and Edna Sheckler, des- | {miles from Marion |the day they (m THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUESDAY SEPT. 16 1930 R P T A R Y T AT O, T A5 o B W Challe » the pictures of the S. Vanderbilt. ABOARD U l\mg s Envoy to Open Canadian Parliament | 1l | | dent b | days. Viscount lelmgdon, First Baron »f Ratton, as Governor-General »f Canada will open the first seg- sion of the seventeenth Parliament' of Canada. Lord Willingdon has been Governos (:r'lleral of the Do- minion since 1926, and is & for wer Governor of Bombay, (International \ewln-l) TARTED FOR “PIN MONEY,” FARM HAS 20,000 TURKEYS Sept. | MARION, O 16.—Ten years cendants of the cklers who cut away Ohio's virgin forests andj turned the first furrows in Marion ! county, decided make a little “pin money” raising turkeys. Today they have 20,000 birds on| an ultra-modern turkey farm 10} women antici- | s and dislikes from step from the three 5,000-egg incubators into the feed lots until they go to market. These two you pate turkey’s li James Carlson, proprietor of Carl- son's Taxi Company, and Mrs. Carlson were passengers on the sea- plane Wrangell which arrived here today. . They boarded the aireraft at Vancouver, B. C - - WHITE HOUSE STABLES SOLD; r TON.—The which the carria horses of Presi- dents were kept have been sold to the federal government as part of the site I mall development in the Wash beautification program stables ln! WASHIN ington 1ger + and Defender of pton’s (inset) challenger. 5. 5. KANE, OFF NEWPORT, Rhode Cup was postponed early this morning on account of fog, and will be run tomorrow [plans to install a new sailing motor today during the lay-off. |span of life, three score and ten years. Less active, yes, much less ac- |she spends her summers. yachts mecting off Newport in the cup races. The other is the Enterprise with its skipper and owner, NO RACE TODAY Island, Sept. 16 |JANE ADDAMS, 70, IS STILL KIND RULER OF HlIL HOL.\ CHICAGO — Time has dealt kindly with Jane Addams, who, on September 6, reached the biblical ve, and not so smooth of brow| and cheek as when she founded! Hull House, her hand is no less| firm in the affairs of that famous | ocial center nor her enthusiasm | dimmed for the welfare work to| which she dedicated a lifetime. | Miss Addams observed her 70th| birthday at Hull's Cove, Me., where It was simple as has been her life, although among those who felicitated her were many of the great of the world. There were messages from Presi-| Hoover; Premier MacDonald, | {who visited Hull House with, his| bndn more than a score of yenrs lago; Julia Lathrop and from Wal- ter Gifford, President of the Am- erican Telephone and Telegraph Company, and William L. Chen- editor of Collier's, who lived Hull House in their youthful at A frail, sensitive girl of gentle breeding and refined education she: was. when Hull #House formed in her active mind. The sordidness, -the sinister vice and depravity, the .ignorance and poverty, she was to. battle ‘were un- knqm\ in Cedarville,- 11, where she and JANE was born. Americs The third s (,‘up One, Shamrock V, is Harold race ADDAMS John Addams was a banker and member of the State| Senate. Jane went to an exclusive| somewhat puritanical school! for young women. Miss. Addams studied further in, for America's Sir Thomas Lipton Europe. old Paris and in London’s Lime- house she glimpsed the poverty and degradation that changed her life. At Toynbee Hall, London's social center, and a pattern for the world's welfare workers, Miss Ad- dams conceived the mechanics of a plan for making more ehdurable the pathway of the unfortunates. She was 29 in 1889 when, with Ellen G. Starr, she founded Hull House at Polk and Halsted Streets, a Chicago vortex of racial hatreds, poverty and crime. In the 40 years that followed Hull House has stretched through ia block and Jane Addams” fame around the world. WOMEN FORM AIR ASSOCIATION FOR ALASKA Mesdames doJ—Tdard. Harold Smith and Coughlin Are Officers At a meeting last evening in the Gastineau Hotel, the Women’s Aeronautic Association of Alaska was organized with Mrs. Winn | Goddard, president; Mrs. Harold Smith, vice-president, and Mrs. ‘Robert Coughlin, secretary-treas- urer. Before the selection of officers, Mrs. Ulysses Grant McQueen, of Beverley Hills, Cal, member of the Women's National Aeronautic Association and of the Women's International Association of Aero- nauties, delivered an address on aviation from the viewpoint of women, and emphasized the need and the advantages of air mail. Mrs. Coughlin was presented with wings surrounding the world, typi- | fying her membership in the wom- en’s international association. I Mrs. McQueen will leave on the IAlaska tonight for Seattle. | —————-——— | PAINTING CALLED SAFEST JOB SPRINGFIELD.— Painters incur the least llability to fatal accidents, a survey of the hazards among oc- cupational groups made by the llll- nois state department of health nad! revealed. Liability is greatest for | electric linemen, oil and gas field rig bullders, explosive handlers and miners, | i e Toll bridges paid $18,072 into the state treasury of Tennessee during July. : | VAPURE A wonderful relief for HEAD COLDS In two convenient sizes PO “Learn the MODERN Way” PLAY REAL JAZZ PIANO IN 3 MONTHS A Personal Course Taught by Mail LEARN POPULAR MUSIC—SYNCOPATION Our Free Booklet Tells How You May Learn Directly From Sheet Music. sary. No Knowledge of Music Neces- You Play a Popular Song the Second Lesson. We GUARANTEE to Teach You to Play in 12 Weeks. WRITE for Your Copy of this FREE BOOKLET. THE HALFHILL STUDIOS OF JAZZ PTIANO Temple of Music Tacoma, Washington _—_——— MODEL 54 WINCHESTERS 270 and 30-06 Rifles, new .. 270 and 30-06 Carbines, new All kinds of 30-06 Shells, per box 30-30 and all similar Shells, per box . -$43.20 40,50 . 2,00 135 Rubber Boots, Shoe Pncs and Rain Clothes See Big Van, The Gun Man Moved to Opposite Coliseum Theatre 50c and $1.00 =4 BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. free Delivery Phone 134 In the crooked, streets oll a pin having as its design two eagle | STUDENT NEW YORK.—Dwight W. Dnvls,‘ governor general of the Philippines, got a new tennis partner when Nicholas Roosevelt was appointed vice governor. Although not a tournament play- er, Roosevelt will offer a good fofl; to the thrusts of the donor of the Davis cup, friends say. And after their tennis match, if something is wrong with the gar- den, Roosevelt can attend to that, too. His one real hobby is the gar-! den and grounds on his summer home at Hewlett, on the south shore of Long Island. Roosevelt, an editorial writer on the New York Times from 1923 until his_appointment, has long been a close student of far eastern affairs. He wag'a great admirer of the policies of Gen. Leonard Woad, who was governor of the far east- ern possession for several years. Born 37 years ago at Oyster Bay, Long Island, his father was a first cousin of President Roosevelt and FRAICHELLE ‘ CLEANSING CREAM . Cleanses, soothes and soft- ens the skin. Superior ‘to soap and water for remov- ing pore - clogging matter. Will not cause a growth of hair. $1.25 | Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery - Phone 33 Post Office Substation No. 1 | The Best SOCKS ! I Ever Wore! That's what bachelors tell PHILIPPINES’ NEW OFFICIAL OF EASTERN WORLD NICHOL/\Q ROOSE one of his closest personal advisors. Young Nicholas grew up in an at- | mosphere of national and interna- tional affairs. He spent several months in Ma- nila as General Wood's guest and made an intensiveé study of the Philippines. Graduated from Harvard in 1914, Roosevelt was attached to the em- bassy at Paris when war was de- clared. He enlisted in the Ameri- can army, achieving the rank. of captain. During the peace confer- ence he was a military aide to President Wilson. He was only an average student, but rowed on his class crew, played a good game of squash and tennis and was popular with his fellow students. Unmarried, during the winter he lives with his mother at the family estate at Oyster Bay. — e Ben Burford, engineer on the Kittiwake, the craft of the Federal Fisheries bureau, is greeting friends in Juneau while the vessel {5 here for a few days. - e — John Hayes, Ninety-eighter, who has been prospecting in the TPaku district during the past summer, is booked on the steamship Yukon for Cordova today. He expects to spend the winter in the Kennecott region. COUPON FOR FREE BULBS {{ us. Wives must also appre- ciate their wear-resisting toes and heels. % New Fall Patterns Sorrels, black and deep blue | { mixtures, heathers dotted with Iy deep red, solid colors with clocks, and many other new | | | | | | I color combinations. Good Until October 1st To advertise our superior Wash- ington-grown bulbs we are giv- ing away several thousand choice giant DARWIN TULIPS Mail this coupon with 25¢ (no stamps) to cover packing and mailing and we will send a col- lection of 12 bulbs guaranteed to blcom in assorted colors. Only one puun for each coupon. WASHINGTON BULB CO., IN Sumner, Wash. The best that money can buy, 50 1b. sack, $2.25 ‘ (A poor article is no bargain at any price) ; BUY THE BEST ALWAYS GARNICK’S Phone 174 GOLD MEDAL FLOUR [ ! — e 1904 BEACON TO BE RELIGHTED electric soarch-l » of the marvels r in 1904 here is to service. The bea- 1 building in University casts a 250,000,000 LOUIS. ST An E FGRMS MINERALS \U‘?K — Rare minerals hblende, the substance | radium is extracted rmed by surface ‘waters seep- through the pitchblende vein. S $2.75 10 $3.50 Colors—Brown, Howard Blue and Tan J.M. SALOUM Front Street Next to Gastineau Hotel CALIF ORNIA GROCERY The Home of Better Groceries PHONE 454~ We take pleasure in inviting you to view our large display of absolutely NEW FALL COATS, DRESSES, ENSEMBLES, Ee. which are here and' are arriving on every boat. These goods are being placed on’ sale at particularly attractive prices. Leader Dep’t. Store GEORGE BROTHERS, Props. v T AT AP s

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