The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 29, 1930, Page 2

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i» @& .” plrchase and develop lands for 2 lIIlIIiiIIIIIIIII|IIIIIlIII|IIIIIl|IIIIII||llIl|IIIIl:IIII||Il iHIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIII|I|I| Pre- lnventory Sale Of BLANKETS : Even though you paid regular THAII 6 = LR L i XHIIHI‘HI'HH prices for such good bed cover- PR ings as these you would be buy- but at these SPEC- S — all economical consider ing wisely— JAL PRIC housekeepers should replenishing blanket supply at this special sale. Double Cotton Blankets Size White and Grey, with colored borders. 70x80. Regular $3.00 value. For This Sale, $2 Part Wool Plaid Blanket Dou’/ Size 66x80. Colors — Peach, Rlue, Rose, Green and Lavender. Regular $4.50 value. For This Sale, B. M. Behre Junear’s I i IR 3.25 s Co., Inc. 2 I):'purllm‘nl Store it i‘llI"l‘llllll!ilhllI'Illlllllllilm ll”|l|lllll|‘ll|l| U. S. DEPARTMENT OF UICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The W eatl | e ¥ >ut er | (By the U. S. Weather Burean) | Forccast for Juneau an¢ vicinity, boginning at 4 p.m., Decomber 29:|1¢ Rain tonight and Tuesday; moder ca winds | LOCAL DATA | Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 20.89 41 3 SE 10 Rain | © 20.91 43 8 ) 12 I 9.97 ) 94 3 Cldy i CABLE AND KADIO REPORTS ; b XRSOHRRDAY | | TUPODARAGE H gt Highest 4 p.m Lowest 4am. 4am. Precip. _4am Station— temp. temp. 2 Weather | BN ... <80, © -90 Pt Cldy |t 1 22 18 Pt. Cl 34 34 12,918 12 Pt -6 -6 10, et = 0 k) 4 2 6 0 30 20 -4 -2 . 2 2% 0 20 12 St. Paul 36 36 4 38 18 e Pt Dutch Harbor 38 38 34 Pt. Kodiak 42 38 40 10 Cordova 2 3 32 4 Juneau 41 1 43 12 Sitka 41 - - Ketchilan 44 41 44 16 Prince R 41 44 1 10 Edmontor 34 28 2 Portland 38 34 30 0 is 54 50 42 0 ) 24 22 20 0 cldy Vancouver, B. C. 44 36 20 0 Clear .ess than 10 miles. The pressure has risen over n of Alaska but remains all lowest near Unalaska and mc v throughout the remainder of the Territ he extr and Southeast It high in the Pa and B h O bia Rain fe Southern Al hea t Ketchikan. weather at Cordova. Temperatures f on the Bering Sea coast and ros2 in the extreme Nor Chang were slight near the Pacific C VAST PARK TO PRESERVE BEAUTIES OF REGION RICH IN WASHINGT( | L()l{lil \ | one SCOUT BILLY 23k systems int a ™ PASSES AWAY The Crampton-( biil appro- l priates a maxiz £ §34.000,000 LLYWOO to carry out a N The park sysicin ram will extend s on the up- years a scolorful | he film colony, known | the Scout,” Vernon on Sy where Was 7 o (‘;" ra*"‘- = mately 20,000 acres 8 Lonfedion n fighting in the project ed against Sit-| H e campa ig Bull ¢ —— e — | Land to be and developed Washington r Won't Works” P i e nE o e Won l.l! orks” Put the To Positions On i 3 and F : Chai 3 | above Gre s, € wi y Chain (,-ung and the WHEELinG, W. Va, Dec. In this parkway | 29— Talk that unemployment the M:. Vernon Memorial way, which is provided for separate appropriation. Beautiful Rock Creek Park and the Anacostia Park system will be fiunded into Maryland. The addi- sections will be fashioned _after the older ones. An appropriation of 316000000 loaned the District of Columbia | worked a hardship on the ha- ‘bitual jobless, the city officials set to work reducing the ranks of the unenmiployed. Jobs were found for many men and those whe would not accept proffered postions are put to work anyway—ten days cn the city chain gang. — eee - Winter legun as g crops, pay big divi chief agronomist at lege of Agriculture. en ends, Geor, manure | the suitable completion of the na- . s the| _tional park system. &m Tanpire want Ads Pay. the Ger clent Socml Lights Cast Out Dg JosepH W s DLaArE | ™= ¥ MR 5 MRS GENE TUNNEY By ALICE ALDEN NEW YORK, Dec 29 —Society Is E. recovering from its annual Pres- | the regis o | Huttor Bome |y s will emu- and mar- mueh to e A0 cph A. Biake, who wa Wil- that Hope but n one of N w ¥ , and £o she, too, isn’t worrying much. The late Gecrge Gould cipitated a social- regis! wife, Edith, a d wifz, Guin- ife in 1921 and b fair had been an open geandal the second M /er recognize Book. weddac but up to now receive “her and in Europe mov in a circle somew moved frof the most exclusive. If any family in New York chould be able to give a lecture o the xdio yn"rn"‘(n of the catty com-| DRY RULING TO SUPREME COURT olly’s hay or the Viscount Dunsford 3 OUT. associated Press Photo William Sprague, New Jersey farmer, in whose cace Judge Willlam Clark (lower left) ruled the prohibition amendment unconstitutional. Sprague was arrested last March for possessing and transporting a truck load of beer. Afier a consultation in Washington, Phillip Fofman (lower right), United States attormey for the district of New Jersey, was instructed to prepare an appeal to the United States supreme court. The I“,mr:matlcal and Inv151ble Dmators Who Pass Judament on the'18 -Carat Elite of Society Have Sprung More Sur- prises Between the Leaves of the 1931 Catalogue = Eveanor HuTron ion, bro e of the So: Rl 1 rende > book. : ch | y hap- are plenty of sur- | sips. The most ihough for committee 35 crash] had been included in tho| Gould was |t en Gould died, Guin- | 4 society has failed to| of Regzster Mg Mes WrtriaM Witrock JR it is the| the senior Louis G.,| mittece on the register, Louis G. Kaufmans, Khmm( ns are listed but thfl.: son, who married Dorethy \D.l.‘ a dancer, is omitted. But | here's the catch. Another son, Gray, who married Mae Daw, one of Zieg- feld’s glorified, has his name in| the book. The question is why did | |the committee show Louis the door and permit Gray to remain? Per- n the committee cannot To facilitate the handling of fight fans who atiend the New Eve smoker of the American n in the Vet arena at A. B. Hall, every 1as been reserved, (it was announced today. This, it | was said, will make it possible for | of the house at the downtown ticket ! were being gobbled up quickly. { favorite in the pre-amokm THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE MONDAY DEC 29 1930 ~ - P B e e ey T ALL SEATS FOR LEGION SMOKER ARE RESERVED Plan to Accommodate Local Fight Fans the fans to buy seats in any part and av8id the usual con- around the office at the ion arena. Tickets can be purchased there as in the past, but there has been some complaint about difficulty ex- rienced by ticket holders in aching the downstairs’ entrance and it is believed this will be avoided under the new spstem. Tickets, which were on sale today, can be obtained at three business houses—Juneau Drug Company, Alaskan Hotel and the Ploncer Pool Room. Choice ringside seats All of the fighters were going through the final training stages! today. Butler, who fights Joe Manila in the main bout, has vir- tually recovered from a rib in- Jjury which slowed him down in his recent fight with Collier. He wa Vets Adopt_iew Seating| in fine form and his backers havz| it doped out he will win early ml the bout by a knockout. Some of the wise ones are hack ing Zamorra, the scrappy littl e‘ rown brother, to win from Siuzg:: Weaver, but the latter rema 4 dope. BROKER FALLS FOUR STORIES ment to: Atiother Pravés Fatal Stunt ore. there are some cats, | who that enough millions | and nt fighting s their pos: rit can in| or to crasn | gate. ‘It must,be so, or else| should so many of them fight | th and nail to remain, once” ‘m,} o the grade? | .- ta it TODAY'S STOCK .l QUOTATIONS | ! .| by / YCRK CITY, N. Y, Dr‘c.' £9.—Closing quotation of Alaska Juiteau mine stock today is 6%, merican Can 108%, Anaconda per 28':, Bethlehem Steel 477%, neral Motors 34%, Granby Con- idated 14%, International Har- 46%, Kennecott Corporation Montgomery-Ward 15%, Na- tional Acme 5%, Packard Motors =~. Simmcns Beds 13%, S:antlard‘ , Standard Oil of New U. S. Steel 1307%, Cur- 21, Pacific Gas and T , Pennsylvania Railroad General Electric 42, West- inghcuse Electric and Mcchamcal 89% . | - e SEAL LEAVES ON PATROL OF YAKUTAT DISTRICT | Wrigm oute to Yakutat on a fur pa- trol, the Seal, Capt. J. O. Selle- ! vold, with Warden Frank Dufresne in charge, left port Saturday morn- ing, it was announced today at iczal headquarters of the Alaska ame Commission. It is expected to return here about the middle of the current week. Old papers at ‘L'ne mmplire. . Here’s the reason every can of HILLS BROS COFFEE is 50 fresh f As rast as Hills Bros. Coffee comes | frqm the roasters which produce | the famous flavor, it is packed in vacuum cans. By this process, air, which destroys the flavor of coffee, is taken out of the can and kept out. No air-tight can will keep| coffee fresh. Hills Bros.’ can is easily opened with the key. vacuum Controlled Roasting gives Hills Bros. Coffee a flavor no other coffec bas. | 61930 | LOOK FOR THE ARAB ON THE CAN |is in Juneau for a few days. She is at the Gastineau. | R. E. Robertson, attorney, re-, 29.—John McGraw, aged 35 year:,| a broker, was found in the yard| an apartment house and dizd| in a hospital as the result of in-} juries he said he suffered when| he fell from the fourth story of| the apartment house. i McGraw said he was trying to! crawl from a hall window to the| kitchen window of the apartment| occupied by Marietta Dailey, annr an unsuccessful attempt To get m‘ touch with her. He said he tried| to enter her apartment to learn if anything had happened to her. McGraw's wife is belleved to be| Josephine Larkin, actress now n Europe. £ | [ WHO'S WHO AND WHERE 3| \ } E. H. Wiley, who is associated with the effort to salvage the gold | off the wreck of the steamship Islander, has returned from a busi- ness trip to Seattle. He was an| incoming passenger on the steam- | ship Queen. Mrs. L. Reinke, who conducts a | women's wear store in Petersburg, | turned on the steamship Queen Saturday from Seattle, where he| went a few weeks ago on legal business. Mrs. C. L. Sampson of Portland, Ore,, is among the guests at the| Alaskan Hotel. Mrs. Thomas Stroebe of Dupont, was a week-end visitor in Juneau. She stayed a tthe Gastineau. Mrs. Michael Korussos daughter, born December 20, St. Ann's Hospital yesterday after- noon. Samuel Christensen, of the Unit- ed States Bureau of Fisheries ves- sel Kittiwake, is registered at the Alaskan. Clifford Furuness, aged 7 years,| and his sister Delphine, 5, were discharged from St. Ann’s Hos- pital yesterday without their ton- sils, for the removal of which they entered the institution late last week. They are able now not only to take ordinary nourishment but to resume feasting on Christmas cakes and candies. . Martini Damourette, chem- ist and bacteriologist of Seattle, who came here on his power yacht Tieh about a month ago and who has spent most of the time since then at his mining property at Hawk Inlet, came to town today. He is at the Zynda. H. Swanson and S. Vukivich are guests at the Gastineau. Mrs. N. L. Caspersen, who was an incoming passenger on the steamship Queen Saturday night, is staying at the Alaskan. jy FESCE L SR Five hundred acres were planted in broom corn on farms in North Carolina this year. L e Eight thousand acres of buck- wheat produced 120,000 bushels of this year. grain for North Carolina tumersl Granata, brothm of Con"rehm.‘n- ISTOSUEFOR * CRIMINAL LigeL {ch:csen»ame Stanley H. Kunz, ICrawl from One Apart- dete |a charge of crimtnal libel. | NEW YORK CITY, N. ¥. D, |leader. 'Salmon Institute Is MODES! ; OF .THE MOMENT ~ipArie Qorma[ coat o blacR Broadcl5th A’ Martial ot a/mand Large w&f' ex- ls downward 7] /orm_ vest. Rty ganization by the salmon canners of the Pacific Northwest of the Salmon Institute, a nonprofit asso- ciation, was announced today by Guy P. Halferty, well known Al- aska canneryman. The new or- ganization was created to foster salmon industries, he said. Articles of incorporation have | been prepared and will be filed in a short time. The Institute will | strive for higher quality in the salmon output and promote the | salmon canning trade by stimulat- CHICAGH I, Dec. —J. C. "cL Peter C. Granata, has obtain- a warrant for the arrest of 1 Democratic candidate, on ing the consumption of canned The alleged libel made was a “:h R | printed statement which linked 3 T |G ata with Al Capone, ang Gran pone, BANG | \iississippi has nearly. 5,000,000 Ll acres of abandoned farm land suit- able for reforestation. — e — More than 128,000 pounds of cab- bages have been sold this year by farmers in Jackson county, N. Ci through cooperative agencles. 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