The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 17, 1931, Page 2

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The Suit that does its own talking! v‘hcn a man tries on a Middishade suit, we don’t have to do any talking about The suit does its own exceptional value. talking! Middishade Clothes are the great new value of this new value era. Middishade Clothes are a revelation in smartness . . . in fabrics . . . in tai every standard they are definitely the finer sort—yet specialization brings them to you for $37.50 An Achievement in Spec MIDDISHADE CLOTHES | B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. X Juneau’s Leading Department Store NORBECK 1S T0 .| SEE WIDE AREA N TERRITORY Covers This District by Auto, Plane and Boat Before Sailing West (Continued from: Page One) by Mr. Goddard. On their return here, the Senator and Gov. Parks were scheduled to leave on the Fisheries boat Widgeon for a short trip to a nearby fish trap to watc! brailing operations. At 7:30 am. Saturday with Maj L. BE. Atkins of ‘the Alaska Road Commission and Mr. Goddard, he| will go by plane to Skagway and Haines. An auto trip over Haines- Pleasant Camp 'highway is sched- uled. They will be absent about six hours. On their return here, the Senator will go through the Alagka Juneau. Twenty-fiwe A munummmlmmmmmmnmmummmuunmumm i years ago, Senator Norbetk made a mp to the Teryi- | tor This is hi§ first trip hers e that time. Apparently he is enjoying it tremendously. Confers With Parks He spent this morning conferring with Gov. Parks and meeting local people. He has a wholésome, ro- bust and engaging personality. He is -genuinely glad to meet people |and learn from them all the facis |he can about the north. He cvi- \donces a keen and sympathetic in- ter in all phases cof Territorial activities and his questions are | more than courtesy inquiries. He will remain here until Satur- | day evening when he will take pas- | sage on the steamer Admiral Wat- is n for Kodiak where he is to joiny |Senator Frederick Walcott and} lparty aboard the Fisheries bos !Penguln accompanying them to the |interior. He will be me: at Sew- ard by H. W. Terhune, Executive Cfficer of the Game Commission, who will accompany him to Ko- | diak. loring. By clothes of Kt s Old Papers at The Emplre. Holeproof 2 a8 Hosiery ialization i . g Exclusive Agents Try a Pair of the new AUTOGART The self-supporting sock New Snappy Patterns a 5 from 10 to en bu , and the export sur- hird. Yet pro- so prolific th. |a mnm ericans are | in the belie e Co unuy s sur- plus is growing every In Implomplu Talk Sym-| "'"‘ pathizes with Alaskans in Their Problems (Continwez from Page One7 Sen :d briefly But he id, The big difference s Alaska rces th’l o is so far a > to learn much as he South l)'\kukls Case it in 30 days, not to ex- Suu“] Dakota has its own trou- about it in advance hoped and believed and would be better to its game than oth- of the country had e buffalo and elk of the all but exterminated ved only through the STOPS VARIATION IN s FLAVOR OF COFFEE :: Wonderful Flavor of Hills mou Bros. Coffee Is the Same in Every Pound he ‘p indigenous to South s wiped out. There arg ame animals in North past century the musk ox—became tinet in A..nkm for Restoration when Senator went to Washington, to then Director of ephen R. Mather, red in the na- Many people have wished for a'ox coffee that didi’t vary in flavor. Hills Bros. Coffee is such a coffee. ! It is roasted by the patented, Con- trolled Roasting process that abso- I lutely prevents variation! 5 As the accuracy of the hour-glass | depends upon an even, continuous B 3 Iitho oh 3 bine . ¢ nern Aldsks, Ho the exquisite, un f sponse and at a Hills Bros. Coffee is produc by Mr. Mather a the patented process that roasts movem: launched for that evenly, continuously . a little at a time. said, money was Controlled. Roasting is different ress’ and & from the ordinary method of roast- ing several hundred pounds at once. The results—as a cup of Hills Bros Coffee shows—a y different too! There is a refre smooth- ness that no othe , be- cause no other way. And remem! flavor never varies! 2 _Hills Bros. Coffee is packed in | g vacuum cans. Air, which makes coffee go stale, is removed and 2 out of these cans. Even ordinary ir-tight” eans won't keep coffe ;:Gfi- But Hills Bros. Coffee can stale! Order some today. As g it by name, and look for the n Anh trade-mark on the can. ap; herd ,bought now in the Inte: More Parks Norbeck is a staunch of parks. The State park h Dakota, the largest in the has proved a profitable in- Where a loss was ex- 1 a profit was returned. The soline tax has more than od the State for its ex- and the tourists paid the d. ed Jasper National Park nada enroute north. There e was shown a golf course built from earth transported 200 miles from.a farm. He was told that |the course had paid for itself. 2 visi “ Hills Bros. Coffee, Inc., San o191 California, ¢ |people had given painting con- Big Revenue Producer Great as is South Dakotd's wheat industry, tourists bring more reve- nue than it does. American tourists are spendlng; 1$50,000,000 annually in Canada. But | | the great mass of Americans pick Europe for their toufs, spéndihg | $500,000,000 annually there. “Andi Europe hasn’'t got anything you have. You are just not under- stood.” He predicted that Alaska’s| future tourist revenue would be| greater than anyone now can con-: ceive. | Luncheon Room Crowded A capacity attendance greeted Senator Norbeck, many being un- able to obtain seats in the enlarged ' luncheon room. His talk was preceded by a small amount of routine business. Cor- respondence from the University Commercial Club of Seattle, Se-| attle Chamber of Commerce and Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce was read. A short report from the local in- dustries committee was read, urg- ing business men to build up local industries by patronizing local in- dustries. It pointed out that in| recent weeks, a number of local SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men BIG SPECIAL DANCE tracts to traveling workmen whose the late Meno C. Herner. Rev. C. E. Rice, Dean of Trinity Cathedral, was the officiating clefgyman. The Rev. Mr. Guise offerd a prayer. The pallbearers were D. W. Bur- ridge, James Kukhman, Danizl Ross, Lee H. Smith, Stanley Harbeson, Charles Whittenhall. Interment was in Evergreen Cemetery. e Establishment of & small debts court, in which litlagants instead lof being represented by attorneys, will plead their own cases in court, has been authorized at Fairbanks |by the City Council. It acted in acedorance with directions given by Attorney General John Rustgard. l Music by Earle Hunter’s Serenaders THE DAILY ALASKA EMPth, mmmmn!nmmmmm;uu|mmmumuumuumum fillllllllllllflllllfllllmlulll FRIDAY JULY |7 1931. day according to a [w edns night, | wir message received today by | the United States Customs office here from' the ‘master of the craft, ‘L\pt R.'P. Cupic. The crew had A narrow éescape, but none suffer- ed injur All personal ef- were lost. burned boat's company ca l‘hu ROAT FAIRLAND IN IDAHO INLET - ] 7 atham at Federal expense. The Crew Will Be Brought Here | captain_and members of the crew VlO nda\r and lhen 1“ be brought to Juneau on the Sent to Ketchikan is motorship Estebeth, due here next | Monday, dand immediately - after- {wards will be sent to Ketchikan. The Fairland ‘was 39.7 feét long, destroyed the fishing vessel { in Idaho Inlei Fire w]and VISIT US AND ¢ MILK, 13 can T ALL. CAN— \m‘ nr.md C()R]\/ WFAL T W”l'”’ ¢ YELJ ()\\ 9 p'mml baz BL'ANS 4 ")s. T se \\””L or NAVY PI(;S black, 4 lbs. . . . 29¢ IFLL(} 3[0r,.,.u,.25c OR JELL WELL PUDDING, pkg. . ... . 10c CHOCOLATE—Prepared with Milk Lard 315" 40c PURE LEAF 3 Lbs. . CHEESE, Ib. . . . .. .. 23¢ AMERICAN CORNED BEEF, can 200 SHAKER SALT ..... 10c - Peanut Butter . 35¢ 2 POUND TIN CORNSTARCH . KINGSFORD—2 Packages mi i T 25¢ SWEET PICKLES . . 35¢ o g QUART fair to local workmen whose homes D g g el 4 SARDINES, 3 for .. . 25¢ institutions. oot Bt iy ¥ HALL _I“‘P""““ 7 during the past week. BORAX CHIPS . ... 33c LAST RITES HELD SATURDA LARGE BOX FOR M. C. HERNER SRl sl Lot e SRGOREETE T o g i i i MARSHMALLOWS . 25¢ Morutary yesterddy afternoon for POUND BOX LYE,can,........1~0“; MATCHES, Ohio . . . 18¢ 6 BOXES TELEPHONE 403 4 gumumn|umnmmmmmmmmummmmummmnu‘mlm d for at the New Eng- | | |ed She Was equipped with a 30 horse.! power gasoline engine. Document- ed out of Ketchikan, she was own- ed by her skipper, Capt. Cupic. 9 Chicago Lawyers Facing Disbarment CHICAGO, July 17.—Nine former of Chicago have been recommend- ed for disbarment in the report of Circuit Judge Thomas Taylor to the the suspension of thirt; cthers. Fifty-five lawyers werc tried |in disbarment® proceedings involv- | ing them 'in-the ‘purported accept-: on the |11 feet wide, and 5.4 feet deep. Sh(’\ancc of salaries from the "dist¥ict hagof Island | was of 14 gross and 10 net tons. without adequate publie service. fllll|IIIIIIIllIHIIIIIllllIIIIlIII|i|lIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIlIIllIIlIIIIIIIllIIIINIIIllIIIIII'HIII!IIIIIIIIIIIII T ] PORK & Beans, 3 for 25¢ VAN CAMPS—Meditum Size BIRD SEED........12¢ ROBINSON THREE IN ONE OIL 22¢ CAN APPLE BUTTER. . . llc LIBBY’ Honey . 5 POUND PAIL CHOCOLATE, Ib. . . . 35¢ GROUND TOMATOES, 2 for . . 25¢ PUREE—Large Cans GRAPE JUICE WELCH’ S~—Quart COFFEE 21bs. . ...45¢ OUR SPECIAL PEACHES large can 20c SLICED or HALVES PINEAPPLE . ... .. 2lc ‘ - LARGE CAN PRUNES, . . ....... 5¢c SUN DRIED ' 'NEW POTATOES . . 50¢c 15 POUNDS CASABAS, b. . . . ... 6¢ LETTUCE, euach . . . . 10c¢ LARGE—SOLID HEAD A ORANGES, 2 dos. . . . 35¢ ’ Prbmpt’l)eli‘vevry attorneys for the sanitary district | Illinots Supreme Court. He propes- | ight | LECT YOUR GR()CERIES FROM A COMPLETE STOCK AT REMARKABLE SAV Chickens . 24¢Lb. FRESH-—DRESSED e e e S e ST USSR BUTTER, 2 lbs. . . . . 63c LYNDEN MALT, 31b. can . . . . 60c BUDWEISER BLUE RIBBON flHHIIIHIIlHIIIIIIllIIIfllIIIIiIIHHIIIIIIIllfllllllfllllllllllllllllIllflfllllfllllllllflllllllllllllllllml!lmlflIlllllllllllllflllllllIififlflllfiflifllfillllfllflfilflhfl”ll FORMER CONG. IS SHOT DOWN PINE BLUFF, Araknsas, July 17. —Former Congressman Chester W. Taylor, of Little Rock, died a few hours after he was shot by his father-in-law, C. M. Phiipot, former | Judge of Jefferson County to whose home Taylor' went to seek re- conciliation' ' with ‘'his" wife. et — South Carolina* spends 19.28 per cent. of the total value of produced crops for fertiliZer, the highest pro- portion in the United States. T 53¢ 55¢ O S O A RO L o

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