The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 1, 1931, Page 5

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+ i THIS FINE WEATHER | COLNTRY NEEDS ISA KILLIN' ME = WHAT THIS NICE. FRIEENDLY FLOOD s WHAT S WRONG WITH T™E SLNSHINE ?) MAGGIE. LOST HER DOG -HE'S A SUN-HOLND FROM THE SLUN- HOLIND ? ) YES,\FA DROP OF RAN EVER FALLS ON A SLIN— HOUND,HES A GONER -IF | DONT FIND HIM,IM A o5 ® 1931, Int'l Feature Servico, fnc., Great Britain frhis resceved. IN FINALS IN HOCKEY GAMES Defeat New York Rangers —Bruins and Canad- ians to Play NEW YORK, April 1.—The Chi- cago Black Hawks swept into the the National Hockey s last night for the defeating the New 1 to 0 in tr their semi- ond game of ries. The Boston 1 Bruins and Montre- s pl ight in Mon the other finali won two games al Canadia treal to deci both CHESTERFIELD, VELVET JENSEN BACK IN NORTH Representative of Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co., in Juneau in Spring is really here, for Fred Jensen is in town. He is the rep- resentative of the sales department of the Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company, Inc, manufacturers of Chesterfield cigarettes and Velvet and Grainger tobaccos. Mr. Jensen generally strikes Ju- neau with the first robins, or he| been doing so for the past and is again on good-will business tour of for 1913. ess is good,” says Mr. Jen- mile is not forced ys it. “There must be thing in a Chesterfield or a of Velvet or Grainger that , for our sales keep mounting from month to month and we expect a splendid 1931.” Mr. Jensen will leave on the steamer next Tuesday for the west- ward and interior and return here | in Second Round— T Is Given $40 | NEW YORK, April 1—Paul Ber-} lenbach, only a shadow of the former great champion, opened a comeback campaign here last night and scored a three-round knock-! jout in a bout with Six-Fingered {Eddie Clark, Harlem ncgro. The ! fight was slow for two rounds and |there was only a small crowd {Berlenbach got $40. e — | | | | CUT FLOWEKS Plenty cf Cut Flowers and potted lants for EASTER We deliver. JUNEAU FLORISTS Telephone 311 — - — - B. P. 0. ELKS | Installation meeting, Elks Audi- { torium, Wednesday. M. H. SIDE: Seer adv. | —adv. ! NOTICE OF ELECTION! To the Electors of ihe ty of \ Juneau. Territory of Alaska. H | NOTICE is hereby given that. pursuant to the provisions of Ordi- |nance Number 177 of the City of Juneau, and in conformity there- with, a General Municipal Election will be hled on TUESDAY, APRIL 7TH, 1931 Between the Hours of 9 o'clock {A. M. and 7 o'clock P. M. of said |day for the purpose of electing the following officers, towit: ONE MAYOR, THREE COUNCILMEN, ONE SCHOOL DIRECTOR. ! The Common Council of the |City of Juneau having heretofore, y resolution, duly designated the voting precincts of said City and the Polling Place in each thereof. the eiectors are hereby notified: That all duly qualified* voters residing within the boindaries of Voting Precinct No. One of said City of Juneau, which are as fol- lows: | All that section lying on the northerly side of East Second Street and West Second Street and the said Second Street extended across the tide flats to the City Limits and easterly of Gold Creek will IMORE SUNSHINE ~ COMES BACK N MARCH THAN Knocks Out Harlem Negrof USUAL AVERAGE It Was Also Colder, Some- what Drier, with Very Little Snow Fall March was colder and drier than the average and with much more than the average amount of sun- chine and comparatively little snow fall, csays the monthly statement issued today by R. C. Mize, in charge of the Juneau Weather Bureau. The mean temperature was 32.8 s, or 09 degree below the normal, a cold period extending fr the 8th to the 19th inclusive. The warmest March of record was that of 1905 with a mean of 42.6 degrees and the coldest was that of 1918 with a mean of 276 de- gree: The highest temperature was 52 degrees on the 27th and the lowest was 9 degrees on the 13th. Previous extremes were 61 ceqrees and -5 degrees. The total precipitation was 3.36 | inches, or 223 inches below the normal. The wettest March of record was that of 1884 with a to- tal of 964 inches and the driest was that of 1906 with a total of 0.56 inch. The greatest procipita- tion in any 24-hour period wa 0.85 inch on the 4th-5th. Precipi- tation occurred on 18 days, twc days more than the average. The | total snowfall was 4.2 inches, &s | compared with a previous average |of 13.8 inches. | The mean relative humidity was |72 per cent at 4 am, 63 per ceni at noon, and 62 per cent at 4 pm The prevailing wind was from 1(!~e south and the average veloc- | ity 6.9 miles per hour. The maxi- | mum velocity” was 38 miles pel hour from the east on the 8th. Seven days were clear, sever partly cloudy and 17 cloudy. Therc were 179 hours of sunshine, or 42 per cent of the possible amount as compared with a previous av- age of 32 per cent. There werc five days with 100 per cent sun- shine. An aurora was observed on the 24th and dense fog was noted or the 31st. ERp. NOEE EASTER LILIES Will be cheaper this year. See JUNEAU FLORISTS Telephone {11 - Old papers ai The Empire. adv. TWO FIRE ALARMS, NO SERIOUS BLAZE Two fire alarms close togethe: brought out the fire department’s equipment this forenoon. In one instance there was no blaze at all and in the other the flames werc confined to a few shingles on ¢ roof and were extinguished with & garden hose. Electricians in fixing the alarm system at the Juneau Lumbe Mills at 9:40 this morning caused a short circuit, with the result hat a false alarm was accidentally surned in. Sparks ignited the roof of the Willard residence. opposite t Alaska Electric Light and Power Company’s plant off Willoughby Avenue, half an hour later. Or the arrival of the Fire Depart- ment’s equipment, one of the fire- men put out the blaze with a gar- jen hose belonging to the Willard esidence. The damage was of no consequence. B. P. 0. ELKS Installation meeting, Elks Audi- torium, Wednesday. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. e EASTER NOVELTIES AND CANDIES Butler, Mauro Drug Co. —adv. adv. LT LT LLHTTTHTT LT YES, MAM, WE SELL ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANERS (TS BEAUTIFUL oay / Viz— ROY AL, HOOVER, PREMIER and GENERAL ELECTRIC PRICED $14.50 AND UP Can be rented and rentals applied on purchase later Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau Juneu, Phone 6 Interwoven SOCKS Douglas Douglas, Phone 18 LT SHIMIRR NIRRT DRI BRI LTI LT T L DT T T T TR LTS No Equal for Wear 1931 VALUES H. S. GRAVES WHEN THINGS WAKE UP The Clothing Man Spring—hanging up another worn-out Winter— unlocks the sunshine, flowers and bunnies. Mankiqd_ seems to begin again with new hope, new ambition, and new determination to be prudent, | learning what to seek and what to shun. 3 A bank account of your own is a thing worth striv- | ing to have. Make this your Bank. First Z_V:ttiona_l Bank POSS———" e Why we spend $2.000.000 . o put CAMEL cigaretliles in the new HUMIDOR PPACK (B) All cigarettes so packed tend to dry out rapidly from the day they are released from the factory. THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat ARCADE CAFE CHRIS BAILEY, Proprietor A Restaurant Catering to Those Who Want Good Things to Eat OPEN DAY AND NIGHT vote in the Fire Apparatus room in the City Hall Building, located at the corner of Fourth and Main Streets, the same being the duly’ designated Polling Place in and for Precinct No. One, City of Juneau.' That all duly qualified voters residing within the boundaries of Voting Precinct No. Two of said City of Juneau, which are as fol- lows: All that section lying on the southerly side of East Second Street | and West Second Street and the| extension of said Second Street across the tide flats to the City Limits will vote in Wolland Tallor | Shop, located in Block G, Lot 2, the same being the duly designated | Polling Place in and for Precinct' No. Two, City of Juneau. | That all duly qualified voters jresiding within the boundaries of | Voting Precinct No. Three of said City of Juneau, which are as fol-| lows: { All that section lying on the northerly side and westerly side of , Gold Creek and the oil pipe line; of the Electric Light Company, in-| cluding the Seater Addition, will vote in Residence Building, located | on the uprer sice of Willoughby | Ave,, located next to “Home Gro-| cery” Store, the same being the| duly designated Polling Place ia| and for Precinct No. Three. City| |of Juneau. | DATED at Juneau, Alaska, this| 16th day of March, 1931 { H. R. SHEPARD, Clerk of the City of Juneau, | perhaps during the latter part of \\ i % and Blousettes Cunning blouses and blousettes in wash- able materials. Territory of Alaska. In all the varied }| a5 pubication, March 16, 1931, 1 “ast publication, April 6. 1931. | i | ? | | { i Blouses | ! waist coat styles and frilly P effects. D) White and Pastel CARL S shades— T AX I So smart with the new suits. PHONE 399 Day or Night Srrdlons B e o s ] rrrr -y : have been making Camel cigar- ttes a long time, and we take a lot of pride in their quality. They contain the choicest Turkish and the mellowest, ripest Virginia leaves that money can buy. We are proud of the quality of Camels as they come from the factory, but the remark of an old friend of ours from Alaska some time ago emphasized a point that has been the problem of the cigarette industry for years. As he smoked a Camel we gave him in our offices one morning, he sighed with very evident enjoyment and then asked jokingly, “What is this, a special blend reserved for Camel executives?” “Certainly not,” we told him. “This package of Camels was bought at the cor- ner store this morning.” “Well,” he said, “I've been a Camel smoker for a good many years, but I never got a Camel as good as this at home.” That statement simply emphasized again the cigarette industry’s most impor- tant problem. Smokers in far away places weren’t get- ting Camels as they left the factory. Naturally, there is no difference what- ever in the quality of the tobacco in Camels, but up to now there has been a very real difference in the condition of the cigarettes by the time they reached the smoker. ‘The flavor and mildness of fine tobacco depend upon the retention of its natural, not. added, moisture content which is prime at about ten per cent. No cigarette package has ever yet been designed that could prevent that precious moisture from drying out. Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory Chart above graphically shows you that only the Camel Humidor Packs delivors cigarettes to ou in prime condition, There are three things about a cigarette that can sting the tongue and unkindly burn the throat: 1. Cheap tobaccos. 2. Particles of peppery dust left in the tobacco because of inefficient clean- ing methods. 3. A parched dry condition of the to- bacco due to loss of natural moisture by overbeating or evaporation. Always certain of the quality of our to- baccos, we had already made Camel a “dustless” cigarette by the use of a spe- cially designed vacuum cleaning appara- tus exclusive with our factory. Now, if we could perfect a package that would actually act as a bumidor and retain the natural moisture content, then you smokers, far away, could enjoy Camels as much as we do here at home. After many experiments and humidity tests with the Pittsburgh Testing Labora- tory, covering all methods of packing cigarettes, came the \ detailed report of which this is the net: (A) No existing cigarette package,including those wrapped in glassine pa- per or ordinary cello- Pphane, gives anything like adequate protection against evaporation. (C) Only a waterproof material with a specially devised air-tight seal could give the desired protection. (D) This measure, while costly, could be relied on to keep Camels in prime condition for at least three months in any climate. The graph above, made by the Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory, shows the results of their study. In the light of it, we experimented with various devices. At last we met suc- zess. The air-tight wrapping involved the designing of special processes, special machines. That is costing more than $2,000,000 the first year, but after you have tried Camels packed this modern way, we ate sure you will agree it is a fine investment. Camel smokers of course have already discovered that their favorite cigarette is better and milder now than ever before. If you aren’t a Camel smoker, try them just to see what a difference there really is between harsh, dried out tobacco and a properly conditioned cigarette. You can feel the difference, you can bear the difference and you certainly can taste the difference. Of course we're prejudiced. We always have believed that Camel is the world’s best cigarette. Now we \ know it. Just treat yourself to Camels in the new Humidor Pack and see if you don’t agree. sMOKE A FRESH CIGARETTE R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. Winston-Salem, N. C., U. S. A. c1 s | Pioneer Pool Hall i| EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Taken over Sharick’s supply of SEWING MACHINE NEEDLES—For sale at Juneau Paint Store PRINTING AND STATIONERY Desk Supplies—Ink—Desk Sets— Blotters—Office Supplies Geo. M. Simpkins Co. ECONOMY CASH STORE Featuring Trupak and H. B. Brands g Front at Main St. Telephone 91 Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS Chas. Miller, Prop. THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 ALASKA MEAT CO. | QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tambles PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 o R S S TS O S S — i

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