The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 14, 1931, Page 2

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New Fall Hats are entirely different Small Empress Eugenic | (;ud derby models—low | over one eye with hair [ on one side showing be- comingly. Velvets and | felts predominate with ostrich and colored [ feather trimming. With all their smartness they are moderately priced. | | $6.50 i B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneaw's Leading Department Store FATHER GOES TO STATES Adventurous “Glacier HUBBARD MELLON ENDS Priest” Ends Three-Day Visit Here Today After spending three days here Rev. B. R. Hubbard, noted explorer of and volcanic regions of Southwest Alaska, sailed this morn- ing on tha steamer Princess Louise enroute first to San Francisco and later to the East. night at Parish Hall delivered a splendid Jecture on his most recent explora- Lions, showing some pictures taken eruptions and other | unusual scenes. A capacity crowd attended and gave the lecturer an with friends and associates, glaciers, for Seattle, Father Hubbard last of voleanic 4 enthusiastic reception. K is his plan to spend interior again. three or four months in the States. After that time he will return to Alaska and make some midwinter studies|utes. at. Aniakchak Volcano and visit the FUTUREMAY JUDGE FALL | LESS HARSHLY Governor Bone Pays Tri- bute to Probity of Harding (Continued from rage One) of Movieland! It is discernible. P connected with the his present-day reputation, the yellow press him.” He adds: distinction. can politics. straighter, ) Hills Bros,” Patented Process Removes Risk of Ruining Roast — Assures Match- less Flavor, Always a perfect degree of roast! | —Andrew W. Mellon, United States | While in Europz, he has conferred with the leading officials of the French, German and British gov- ernments. HAWKS ADDS TO HIS AIR RECORDS NEW YORK, Aug. 14 — Capt. Frank Hawks, speedy commercial flier, established a new world's record for flight between Chicago and New York today. He made the aerial voyage from Chicago to New York in 3 hour sand 49 min- S e — Old Fapers al The Embplre. U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRIO ULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The W eather (By the U. 8. Weather Buress) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., August 14: Showers tonight and Saturday; moderate westerly winds. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yest'y 30.19 56 92 S 9 Cidy 4 am. today 30.12 53 97 S 5 Cldy Noon today 30.09 54 93 S 6 Rain wABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4a.m. Precip, 4a.m. temp. temp. | emp. temp, velocity 24 hrs, Weather 28 28 | 26 26 16 0 Cldy 60 56 | 40 40 4 04 Clear ... 58 58 | 50 50 6 0 Cldy . 64 60 | 52 54 . 0 Cldy 52 52 48 48 —_ Trace Pt.Cldy .. 58 54 | 48 50 6 46 Rain 64 58 48 48 4 2 Cldy 52 50 46 46 4 01 Pt Cldy .. 66 50 46 46 6 [ Cldy . 0 0 52 54 k. 0 Cldy 54 52 50 50 6 184 Rain . 58 56 T 5 01 Cidy 63 —_ | 53 57 0 05 Cldy . 64 62 | 54 54 0 0 Pt. Cldy . 66 66 | 54 58 0 0 Cidy 68 62 | 46 48 2 [ Clear 0 70 | 54 54 0 0 Clear 80 8 | 56 56 % 0 Clear .62 - 56 | 5 53 . 0 Cldy 5% E‘f‘%aw pressure area has moved eastward and is cen- the upper Yukon Valley with rain in Bering portion of the Gulf of Alaska and portions Alaska. The pressure has risen off the California Alaska accompanied by clearing”weather in the tr Temperatures have fallen over most of the Territory. | *—Less than 10 miles. perfect, unvaryin tinuously . . . a little at a time. | rare blend passes through the roast- |ers in a steady, unvarying stream. uessing — as' is | necessary with ordinary, bulk meth- ods — Hills Bros. control the tem- erature of the roast automatically. very berry is perfectly roasted. As a result, every pound has ‘a And instead of matchless, unvarying flavor, the can. & [y Francisco, California. — PHONE 487 MARKOE STUDIO Photographs_ of Quality Portraiture, Photo, Finish- Ing, Cameras, Alaska Views, Ete. First National Bank Bldg. GEMEY Latest Paris Creation Face Powder $1.00 Body Powder ....$L.25 ‘Toilet Water $1.75, Perfume $1.25 Rouge ...$ 50 Lip Stick $ .50 Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery Phone 88 Post Office Substation Neo. 1 ered roar emanating from the Czar A member of the Harding Cabi- whose Department was not re- oil on and had a clean bill of I , Who, revering the memory of the late President, writes, “If a man values his' peace of ‘mind and he makes a mistake to have anything to do with our politics, for there is no limit to what his enemies or will say about “There is no reason in the world why Fall shculd not have been consulted with regard to Cabinets, policies or anything else at the time he was selected as a member of the Harding cabinet. No man stood higher than he. He bad been an honored judge, a Senator—al- most everything a man could have been, and in every respect had ac- quitted himself with credit and “It was a great occasion at Mar- ion, and a deserved tribute to one of the most maligned and abused men that ever figured in Ameri- There never was & more ‘honest or better meaning man in our public life than Harding. True, be was hu- man, a man's man, if you pleasa. He liked to play a little game of! poker with congenial- friends, bhe liked to bet he could make a hole at golf in fewer strokes than his adversary, but:he was; an honost | man, the truest of -friend and.the the most likeable companion any- body ever. saw. When we gef away, ROASTING CAN MAKE OR SPOIL THE., FLAVOR OF COFFEE To keep this delicious coffee fresh, Hills Bros. pack it in vacuum cans. Air, which makes coffee go stale; is removed and kept out of the cans.: Ordinary, “air-tight” cans won’t keep coffee fresh. But Hills Bros, Coffee can’t go stale. Order some today. Ask for it by name, and look for the Arab trade-mark on Hills Bros. Coffee, Inc., San © 1931 mE D/-XILY ALAS]?A EMPIRE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1931. from the day of his traducers, all they have said and done in the way of abuse and rotten insinua- tions will be forgotten and con- demned just as has been the case with the traducers of Washington and of Lincoln, Cleveland, and others of our Presidents, who have paid the penalty demanded of so great a proportion of honorable mcn who have participated in our public. life.” B. Mont Reily, who was appoint- ed governor of Porto Rico by Harding, and had a stormy time of lit, in a speech at Kansas City, re- calls a conference which he at- tended in Washington after the Chicago convention. “Some one suggested at that meeting that the personality of President Wilson should be made the issue of the campaign. Others agreed to the plan, but Mr. Hard- ing immediately jumped to his feet and said: “Walt, gentlemen, I guess you have nominatéd the wrong candi- date ifthis is the plan, for I will never go to the White House over the broken body of Woodrow Wil- son.-T have won many battles, but never along these lines.’ “When I read or hear of the at- |tacks on the character and mem- ‘ory of President Harding, my mind iruns back instantly to that Wash- ington: conference where this gen- tle: gentleman refused to permit 'any. eriticism. of - his Democratic | ‘When the storm broke, or began 1o break, over the Naval oll leases —the 'stricken President, then in Alaska—it was notable that his | former Democratic colleagues in the ‘Senate made no effort to impli- cate him in the scandal, They be- lieved in the man. Ever magnani- mous, he had given evidence time and again of his fair-mindedness and destation of mere partianship. He said gallantly when President Wilson declined to send Gen. Leon- ard Wood overseas: “I bow to the will of the Commander in Chief.” He loved his country. A patriot first, he was always a man. That was Warren G. Harding. His col- leagues understood and appraised him justly. So they. do to this day. » e Now 'known by prison number 6991, Albert B, Fall aged and in- {firm, doubtless is sustained by the knowledge that New Mexico, where ke began his carcer in early Ter- ritorial days, believes implicitly in him, as his tragic chapter nears the end. Tts legislature and its {two United States Senators united in an appeal for clemency. But, the brand is upon him and it is t0o |late for effectual removal. History ‘may find condonement for his er- jrors, Af £o they be. Meanwhile i Uncle Sam ‘has really profited: by |the Naval oil leases. Doheny. bears flrRoast’iiz‘lg deter}rlninemle)fl?}vor of the financial brunt. He lost mil- coffee. Too much or ittle can is investment in Pearl causo dissatibfaction. ‘But there fa Lo Y e 1 Hills Bros. invented and patented a proc- ess that insures that degree for TRIP ABRUAB‘ every pound. It is called Controlled Roasting. » by As tc}\e accuracy of the hour-glass lepends upon an evi i VILLEFRANGE, France, Aug. 14.| flow . » & ttle &t o tine e o's I ng degree of roast | Secretary of the Treasury, sailed | is secured for Hills Bros. Coffee by from here for New York today.| Controlled Roasting— thepatented process that roasts evenly, con- (Harbor. The next chapter will be | written when Congress is asked to reimburse him. Fall was empowered to act and Doheny has been exon- erated of any wrong doing in the premises. —————————— SLAYER PAYS DEATH PENALTY August of John Babcock in the Iatter’s cabin at Cecil Lake. Connecticut Finds Few Safe Roadside Springs HARTFORD, Conn,, Aug. 14—Of the scores of roadside springs and wells, Connecticut's Hzalth Depart- ment has found less than a dozen safe for drinking water. Motorists, campers, and picnick- ers have been warned to drink only from places marked with an official 'sign of 1931 inspection. Surrounding conditions have been found to count heavily in rating rwa!;er supplies, many apparently \clean springs being found to be subject to contamination. No roadside brooks are recom- mended' as safe. water supplies. - i Tl BRI Angry 'Guide: “Why didnit you shoof at: the tiger?” Timid Hunter: “He didn’t have the . right kind of expression on his face for a rug.” HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOP FOR RANGES HEATERS AND FIREPLACES Telephone 92 or 95 and leave your order with {CEORGE BROTHERS i $4.50 per Load Chester Barneson JUNEAU GIRLS IN SCOUT TROOP Mrs Roobert E Elis k| Captain and Patrols Number Four Notice of the - official enroll- ment of Chilkat Troop Number 1 of the Juneau Girl Scouts was re- ceived here last week by the Cap- tain, Mrs.-Robert E. Ellis. Early in the spring, the troop was organized by Mrs. Charles Hawkesworth with a membership of 16 girls. In May, the group was taken over by Mrs. Ellis, The membership gradually increased until now there is a total of 25 girls with 10 girls on the waiting list. Patrols Number Four The troop is divided into four patrols, namely: Hawk, Fawn, Bob-White and ‘Wolverine, with Lorene Smith, El- len Mize, Jean Simpkins and Bar- bara Winn as Patrol Leaders. At the beginning of school it is plan- ned to increase the membership to 32, each patrol consisting of eight girls. The girls are trying to secure a meeting place which they can have for their own. They hope to have scme place before school be- gins which can be used at any time as a club room. Lieutenants of Troop Mrs. Ellis has as her lieutenants Elizabeth Pullen and Iris Gray. The members of the troop are Helen Beistline, Jane Blomgren, Anna Campbell, Kathleen Carlson, Jean Faulkner, Doris Freeburger, Sibyl Godfrey, Patricia Harland, Enid| Jarvis, Mary Jean McNaughton, | Mary Metealf, Ellen Mize, Beatrice | Mullen, Virginia Mullen, Grace Nelson, Carol Robertson, Bernice | Romunseth, Barbara Simpkins, | Jean Simpkins, Annabelle Simp-| son, Lorene Smith, Elizabeth Stew- | , Jean Taylor, Jeanne Vander- , Mary VanderLeest, Barbara Winn, and Mavis McCormick. The Troop Committee is com- posed of Mrs. H. L. Faulkner, Mrs. Wellman Holbrook and Mrs. Hawk- | esworth. | e —— | TELESCOPE ACCURATE WASHINGTON Photographs made with the new 40-inch telc scope under constructi e U. §, Naval Observato: { cussed with an accuracy of one- tenth of a thousand of an inch, says Prof. G. W. Ritchey, its| builder. | o o e e Butler Mauro Drug Co. Sells SHEAFFER PENS N\ SHEAFFER'S . . .for Effortless Writing ... Perfect balance is built intc SHEAFFER'S pens and pencils That is why they handle so com fortably. And these advantages ar¢ .guasanseed for life if you use 2 SHEAFFER LIFETIME®. EAFFER'S COMPANY - FORT MADHON. Sells NOW TOTAL 2; William Joseph Sullivan, (above) of Portland, Oregon, former dia- mond star of the Notre Dame nine, Antho; " . H. is now a valued player with the |1, s“l:!e!,“Mrs. st o Chicago White Sox. Young Sulli- 2 van’s uniform brings him back in- ST T T R to the shoes of his father, W. Sul- | .o Peck: “Where have you livan, who was a White Sox catch- er in his prime. William shows promise as a pitcher. RIS TRt Fake—Schwager = says he never paid a doctor’s bill in his life. Bosch—Exceptionaly healthy eh?| Fake—No;. exceptionally poor pay. - |16 PASSENGERS :|and sailed for Vancouver and Seat- # | steamer here for southern ports.| Those leaving on it were: For Vancouver, Mr. and Mis. J. been ,all evening?” made of asbestos for your office burned down two hours ago.” SAIL ON LOUISE Canadian Pacific Liner in Port from Skagway and Sails South With a light list from ‘the North, the Canadian Pacific steamship Princess Louise, Capt. A. Slater, arrived in port at 5:30 a.m. today tle connections after remaining here ' two hours, | Sixteen passengers boarded the | P. Guiry and Miss M. C. Wood- ward. For Seattle: Rev. B. R. Hubbard, Mrs. J. Ackerman and baby, Pat Mills, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Ravet, Mason Lee, J. S. Hall, W. Tege,| Miss Lilly Kronquist, Miss Betty Miles: “At the office.” Mrs. P. “Then you must be Tt CAPITOL. P e et e e JUST RECEIVED New Shipment of Ide Pajamas Pull Over Style $2.25 t SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men Were S Y- DEL MONTE TGMATOES Solid Pack Large No. 2% Tins 3 for All Flavors—Each Package, half pound SWEET PRUNES— 4 Pound Package No. 1 tins SHEAFFER PENS - is (OMPORTABLE AND REFRESHING DurinG AucusT 53¢ PURE FRUIT PRESERVES—In Green Goblets— BUTTER -Sunset Gold-—Always Fresh and LOWEST PRICES SPICED HAM—Delicious for Cold Sandwiches—per pound ......... 45c BOILED HAM—Imported OPPING ARMOUR’S LIGHTHOUSE CLEANSER Per tin DEL MONTE PEARS— No. 2 tins 5¢ Pint Jars WALNUT MEATS—Fresh, Sweet and Clean-—Cello SWEET PICKLES—Plain or Sweet phone ~ ARMOUR’S PUREV A LARD 4 Pound Pail 65¢ 8 Pound Pail 4 o -

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